Scared of weight loss plateaus.
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urshela111
Posts: 25 Member
Last year i lost 9 kgs in 3 months and after that i plateaud at 60kgs for 2 months. I gave up because it affected it mentally. I started working in the hotel industry and over the course of 9 months i gained back the 9 kgs.
Now its been 2 weeks since iv been working out, but im scared il plateau again and the frustration will be back.
P.s (iv read everything about plateaus)
Now its been 2 weeks since iv been working out, but im scared il plateau again and the frustration will be back.
P.s (iv read everything about plateaus)
0
Replies
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It's going to happen. Everyone hits those moments where the number on the scale just will not move. A lot of the time, you'll notice you're still losing inches! If you really so get worried about it, eat at maintenance for a bit (maybe a week) and then go back to eating at a deficit. Sometimes that little break is all you need!7
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If you've read everything about weight loss plateaus, you'd know that they don't exist.
Weight loss comes from a consistent calorie deficit over time. Weight gain happens when you over time consistently eat more than you burn.
A smaller body requires less energy than a bigger body.
Weight fluctuates naturally from day to day, independently of "real" (fat) loss and gain. These fluctuations can easily outweigh(!) the amount of fat you're able to lose in a week, maybe two. Weight fluctuations are sudden, can be quite large, but in both directions. Weight loss/gain happens through small increments in one direction.
To see if you're still losing, you have to weigh yourself regularly and consistently, and look at the trend over time. To keep losing, you have to keep a consistent calorie deficit. To keep having a consistent calorie deficit as you get lighter, you may have to tighten up your logging. You may also have to reassess your weight goal. Is a few pounds worth the extra effort to achieve and maintain? (This last bit is up to you to decide. The rest is not.)25 -
I figure if I'm not gaining, I'm winning and I certainly don't want to give up when not gaining is way better than being fatter.22
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60 kg is about 132 lbs. Depending on your height that may be a healthy weight. I'm not judging what you want as a goal weight but just mentioning it.5
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Plateau is just a fancy way of describing inaccurate logging or too high of a calorie goal. I have lost 152 pounds and never hit a plateau. Weight loss isn't linear but as long as you maintain a calorie deficit, the trend over time will keep going down. There is nothing to it but to do it.20
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displaced1 wrote: »60 kg is about 132 lbs. Depending on your height that may be a healthy weight. I'm not judging what you want as a goal weight but just mentioning it.
Yep and the scale will and should move slowly and there isn't much room for error. Fortunately, there is also no need to rush.3 -
Just because you have never been to Spain doesn't mean it doesn't exist. I hit a plateau that lasted three and a half months. I was weighing and measuring and logging everything. I have now lost 84 pounds. What caused it? Who knows. Eating at maintenance for a week got me going again. I went back to dieting and continued to lose at slightly higher calories. I am now 10 pounds from goal. I agree that you may continue to lose inches even if your actual body weight isn't moving. With bodies that have a huge percentage of our weight made up of water we have to understand that although calories in vs. calories out will determine our fat loss body weight is affected by so many things. A classic example is (TMI warning) how often your bowels move. That can affect your weight if things have slowed down. The closer you get to goal weight the slower the loss will be. Many people think they are on a plateau if they aren't losing 2 pounds a week. That just isn't a plateau. If it happens you can get through it. Just don't quit. You have to keep going and keep in mind that if you aren't gaining you are ahead of the game. I decided when I got stuck that if that was my maintenance level I would just live there. I was so unwilling to gain back the weight I had lost. Eat at a level you can live at. Crash dieting never works. This is an eating plan not a diet to go off of and go back to "normal" eating (as in what you were doing before that caused the weight gain). Good Luck.15
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Plateaus will happen every time. So what do you do? Not try at all? Doesn't seem like a feasible option to me. Just stick with it, no matter what, and you'll get it. And once you come off of that plateau, you'll feel even better about the success. Good luck!4
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cheryldumais wrote: »Just because you have never been to Spain doesn't mean it doesn't exist. I hit a plateau that lasted three and a half months. I was weighing and measuring and logging everything. I have now lost 84 pounds. What caused it? Who knows. Eating at maintenance for a week got me going again. I went back to dieting and continued to lose at slightly higher calories. I am now 10 pounds from goal. I agree that you may continue to lose inches even if your actual body weight isn't moving. With bodies that have a huge percentage of our weight made up of water we have to understand that although calories in vs. calories out will determine our fat loss body weight is affected by so many things. A classic example is (TMI warning) how often your bowels move. That can affect your weight if things have slowed down. The closer you get to goal weight the slower the loss will be. Many people think they are on a plateau if they aren't losing 2 pounds a week. That just isn't a plateau. If it happens you can get through it. Just don't quit. You have to keep going and keep in mind that if you aren't gaining you are ahead of the game. I decided when I got stuck that if that was my maintenance level I would just live there. I was so unwilling to gain back the weight I had lost. Eat at a level you can live at. Crash dieting never works. This is an eating plan not a diet to go off of and go back to "normal" eating (as in what you were doing before that caused the weight gain). Good Luck.
This can't be compared to denying the existence of Spain, but to referring to Europe as a country. You are saying what I said - body weight is so much more than just fat, and don't quit just because you can't see the drop on the scale every week.4 -
Here i am back at the plateau again. At 61 kgs. Having lost 9 kgs. This time iv measured my self to keep a tracks of inches lost. Havent seen any significant or any changes at all past 4 weeks.
I have however increased my workout and switched to strength training. Done carb cycling.
But i will eat at maintainence for a week then switch to my deficit at 1200 kcal.
Thank you all!
My weight past three days have 61.1, 61.2 and 61.5 i have started gaining. Now i just want to be sure if im in a plateau at all or it is just water weight fluctuations.0 -
If you've increased your workouts and started strength training, you're likely retaining fluid for muscle repair.
How did you come to that 1200 cals? If you don't have much weight to lose (ie less than 20 lb), you should only be aiming for 0.5 lb per week, and you need to eat 50-75% of any calories you burn from exercise as well.4 -
kommodevaran wrote: »If you've read everything about weight loss plateaus, you'd know that they don't exist.
Weight loss comes from a consistent calorie deficit over time. Weight gain happens when you over time consistently eat more than you burn.
A smaller body requires less energy than a bigger body.
Weight fluctuates naturally from day to day, independently of "real" (fat) loss and gain. These fluctuations can easily outweigh(!) the amount of fat you're able to lose in a week, maybe two. Weight fluctuations are sudden, can be quite large, but in both directions. Weight loss/gain happens through small increments in one direction.
To see if you're still losing, you have to weigh yourself regularly and consistently, and look at the trend over time. To keep losing, you have to keep a consistent calorie deficit. To keep having a consistent calorie deficit as you get lighter, you may have to tighten up your logging. You may also have to reassess your weight goal. Is a few pounds worth the extra effort to achieve and maintain? (This last bit is up to you to decide. The rest is not.)
This!
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Plateaus are a normal part of the process
Therefore, mentally prepare for it to happen, stick to your plan and give the process time to work. Why be scared and why let a normal phase put you off the whole plan?3 -
Nony_Mouse wrote: »If you've increased your workouts and started strength training, you're likely retaining fluid for muscle repair.
How did you come to that 1200 cals? If you don't have much weight to lose (ie less than 20 lb), you should only be aiming for 0.5 lb per week, and you need to eat 50-75% of any calories you burn from exercise as well.
I used the app to generate the calorie intake limit. Thanks a lot. I actually have 20 lbs to lose.0 -
urshela111 wrote: »Nony_Mouse wrote: »If you've increased your workouts and started strength training, you're likely retaining fluid for muscle repair.
How did you come to that 1200 cals? If you don't have much weight to lose (ie less than 20 lb), you should only be aiming for 0.5 lb per week, and you need to eat 50-75% of any calories you burn from exercise as well.
I used the app to generate the calorie intake limit. Thanks a lot. I actually have 20 lbs to lose.
What weekly weight loss goal did you set it to?0 -
I use this:
https://www.caloriesecrets.net/how-many-calories-should-i-burn-a-day-to-lose-weight/
my fitness pal caps at 1200 and messes up when it comes to adding exercise calories. I.e. if it didn't have the cap it may have put your calories at 1000 then you add your exercise calories on top, instead your adding to the 1200... so there's an extra 200cal boom.
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meganpettigrew86 wrote: »I use this:
https://www.caloriesecrets.net/how-many-calories-should-i-burn-a-day-to-lose-weight/
my fitness pal caps at 1200 and messes up when it comes to adding exercise calories. I.e. if it didn't have the cap it may have put your calories at 1000 then you add your exercise calories on top, instead your adding to the 1200... so there's an extra 200cal boom.
I've never noticed that MFP "messes up when it comes to adding exercise calories". It has always seem straightforward to me ... very clear and easy to use.
I'm at 1440 cal on MFP.
I burned about 350 calories in exercise.
Now I've got 1790 calories to eat.
Excellent!
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I get given 1200 no matter my activity level for the 1kg per week loss as it is where it caps.1
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Weight Plateaus DO exist!! It is a normal body compensation for changes we make in our eating/nutrients, etc. I lost 55 lbs on WW 9 years ago. The first 35lbs came off slowly, but steady. Then I hit the dreaded plateau! I logged, measured, weighed EVERY morsel that went into my mouth, HONESTLY, and every week for 6 weeks I would weigh in, and nothing, sometimes even a small gain!! I had a total meltdown at the scale on week 6. My leader took my journal and we poured over my food choices. After losing 35 lbs and doing moderate exercise, she felt I wasn't eating ENOUGH! So, she upped my protein, and added more healthy carbs, and the very next week I was down 3 lbs!! Our bodies do strange things, and yes, calories in and calories out are the rule, plateaus DO occur and you just have to work through it. I am 10 years older now and gained 25 of the 55 lost back, and it is coming off very slowly, but I am taking every ounce lost as a success. I am geared for the plateau and will make adjustments as they occur. Good luck and hang in there!!1
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meganpettigrew86 wrote: »I get given 1200 no matter my activity level for the 1kg per week loss as it is where it caps.
You have to enter your exercise separately.
My activity level is sedentary (but I manually adjusted my calorie amount to 1440) ... and then I add my exercise, selecting the low/light/slow options most of the time.0
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