Week 1 done and DAMN!!
Crushingit22
Posts: 70 Member
First week weight in using the app. 9 pounds gone! What a difference. Not hungry, very noticeable in the mirror and feel great!
I wanted to lose 10 lbs as a reasonable goal over a 8 week period. Didn't know I would do it in basically a week.
Going for another 10 pounds. At that weight I will actually be the correct weight for my height.
May as well.
I wanted to lose 10 lbs as a reasonable goal over a 8 week period. Didn't know I would do it in basically a week.
Going for another 10 pounds. At that weight I will actually be the correct weight for my height.
May as well.
13
Replies
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100%! I started off with a goal in mind and when I started hurtling towards in quite quickly I revised it to a slightly harder goal. sometimes starting off with something so hard is just unmotivating. good for you, keep going!3
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crotondo1478 wrote: »First week weight in using the app. 9 pounds gone! What a difference. Not hungry, very noticeable in the mirror and feel great!
I wanted to lose 10 lbs as a reasonable goal over a 8 week period. Didn't know I would do it in basically a week.
Going for another 10 pounds. At that weight I will actually be the correct weight for my height.
May as well.
that'll be mostly water, so don't expect to lose that much again next week.11 -
Well done. Keep up the great enthusiasm. Tgere is plenty of support here0
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Congratulations!0
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crotondo1478 wrote: »First week weight in using the app. 9 pounds gone! What a difference. Not hungry, very noticeable in the mirror and feel great!
I wanted to lose 10 lbs as a reasonable goal over a 8 week period. Didn't know I would do it in basically a week.
Going for another 10 pounds. At that weight I will actually be the correct weight for my height.
May as well.
Yeah that's mostly water weight I would think. The water weight can come back as quick as you lost it. Don't get me wrong, that's a great start! Keep it up!0 -
That's Awesome! A good first week is always a great motivator to keep you going.2
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A couple buzz kills in here.6
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crotondo1478 wrote: »A couple buzz kills in here.
Yeah, sorry, that's the way it goes, but you know. You would have had to lose that 9 lbs anyway, and we all lose some water first anyway. We're just trying to set you up good for next week when nothing changes so you don't freak out.
Go for your goal, you'll make it. It will just take a little longer than two weeks
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Mmm yup yup! I tell clients at work weight fluctuates a lot, so weighing every day is a very bad idea. I know too many people who weigh themselves every day, and even multiple times a day. Weighing once every week at a specific time each day is a good way to go; and even then every other week up to a month- still keeping track of the weekly. I know someone else who would keep track of everything but not officially log until a specific day of the month, just to track how often she fluctuates and to track trends.2
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crotondo1478 wrote: »A couple buzz kills in here.
Yeah, sorry, that's the way it goes, but you know. You would have had to lose that 9 lbs anyway, and we all lose some water first anyway. We're just trying to set you up good for next week when nothing changes so you don't freak out.
Go for your goal, you'll make it. It will just take a little longer than two weeks
Lol! I know. I wish it were that easy.1 -
BlueButterfly94 wrote: »Mmm yup yup! I tell clients at work weight fluctuates a lot, so weighing every day is a very bad idea. I know too many people who weigh themselves every day, and even multiple times a day. Weighing once every week at a specific time each day is a good way to go; and even then every other week up to a month- still keeping track of the weekly. I know someone else who would keep track of everything but not officially log until a specific day of the month, just to track how often she fluctuates and to track trends.
I am definitely only weighing in once a week. I don't need the added stress.0 -
Congratulations! What a great start! What you have there is a starting whoosh, which is a great feeling. Honestly it's not likely to come back on next week. But do expect the weight loss to slow down from that first boost. Keep up the good work and you'll be well on the way to your goal.3
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Keep it up!0
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Awesome! It's taken me a month to loose 10 lbs. You keep it up!!0
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crotondo1478 wrote: »A couple buzz kills in here.
I want you to succeed, and I'll bet everyone else here does too. But to lose 9lbs of fat you would have had to have a deficit of 31,500 calories last week. That is 4500 calories a day. Let's say that you are an active guy and maintain at 3500 calories a day. You would have had to have exercised away another 1000 calories a day and not eaten anything all week long. Or burned 1500 calories a day and eaten only a 500 calories a day. Or some other equally difficult variation.
You should absolutely be thrilled with your success. But just keep in mind that if the scales don't budge (or worse, go backwards) at some time in the next couple of weeks it doesn't necessarily mean that something is wrong with your approach, just that your water retention levels are returning to more normal levels. Keep going!1 -
goldthistime wrote: »crotondo1478 wrote: »A couple buzz kills in here.
I want you to succeed, and I'll bet everyone else here does too. But to lose 9lbs of fat you would have had to have a deficit of 31,500 calories last week. That is 4500 calories a day. Let's say that you are an active guy and maintain at 3500 calories a day. You would have had to have exercised away another 1000 calories a day and not eaten anything all week long. Or burned 1500 calories a day and eaten only a 500 calories a day. Or some other equally difficult variation.
You should absolutely be thrilled with your success. But just keep in mind that if the scales don't budge (or worse, go backwards) at some time in the next couple of weeks it doesn't necessarily mean that something is wrong with your approach, just that your water retention levels are returning to more normal levels. Keep going!
I exercise 5-6 days a week including an hour on weights and an additional hour on the treadmill. I am averaging about 1200-1400 calorie intake a day and don't feel hungry. When I say 1200, I am not factoring in the exercise. End of week two was today. I weighed in at another 5 lbs lost. That is 14 lbs in 2 weeks. I am only 5 lbs to the so called not overweight BMI. Hopefully I will be there in a week or two and can move to maintaining the weight. Amazingly I am not hungry and feel great!1 -
crotondo1478 wrote: »goldthistime wrote: »crotondo1478 wrote: »A couple buzz kills in here.
I want you to succeed, and I'll bet everyone else here does too. But to lose 9lbs of fat you would have had to have a deficit of 31,500 calories last week. That is 4500 calories a day. Let's say that you are an active guy and maintain at 3500 calories a day. You would have had to have exercised away another 1000 calories a day and not eaten anything all week long. Or burned 1500 calories a day and eaten only a 500 calories a day. Or some other equally difficult variation.
You should absolutely be thrilled with your success. But just keep in mind that if the scales don't budge (or worse, go backwards) at some time in the next couple of weeks it doesn't necessarily mean that something is wrong with your approach, just that your water retention levels are returning to more normal levels. Keep going!
I exercise 5-6 days a week including an hour on weights and an additional hour on the treadmill. I am averaging about 1200-1400 calorie intake a day and don't feel hungry. When I say 1200, I am not factoring in the exercise. End of week two was today. I weighed in at another 5 lbs lost. That is 14 lbs in 2 weeks. I am only 5 lbs to the so called not overweight BMI. Hopefully I will be there in a week or two and can move to maintaining the weight. Amazingly I am not hungry and feel great!
you don't want any muscle i take it? using the starvation approach to lose weight?3 -
crotondo1478 wrote: »goldthistime wrote: »crotondo1478 wrote: »A couple buzz kills in here.
I want you to succeed, and I'll bet everyone else here does too. But to lose 9lbs of fat you would have had to have a deficit of 31,500 calories last week. That is 4500 calories a day. Let's say that you are an active guy and maintain at 3500 calories a day. You would have had to have exercised away another 1000 calories a day and not eaten anything all week long. Or burned 1500 calories a day and eaten only a 500 calories a day. Or some other equally difficult variation.
You should absolutely be thrilled with your success. But just keep in mind that if the scales don't budge (or worse, go backwards) at some time in the next couple of weeks it doesn't necessarily mean that something is wrong with your approach, just that your water retention levels are returning to more normal levels. Keep going!
I exercise 5-6 days a week including an hour on weights and an additional hour on the treadmill. I am averaging about 1200-1400 calorie intake a day and don't feel hungry. When I say 1200, I am not factoring in the exercise. End of week two was today. I weighed in at another 5 lbs lost. That is 14 lbs in 2 weeks. I am only 5 lbs to the so called not overweight BMI. Hopefully I will be there in a week or two and can move to maintaining the weight. Amazingly I am not hungry and feel great!
Sorry, but you are setting yourself up for failure. With this plan, and at your rate of loss, you're losing more lean body mass (muscle) than fat (although as others point out, much of a dieter's first week's loss will be water weight) and this will mean that despite the weight loss you will not look as lean as you hope and when you do decide to maintain weight your calorific intake will need to be lower than you hoped.
I strongly urge you to:- Exercise less - reduce the cardio specifically to a couple or three short sessions and run a progressive strength program for 3 or 4 1 hour sessions per week. Ideally, plan this to give you at least 1 full day off.
- Eat more - 1200 is highly unlikely to be sufficient for a safe rate of loss for a male working out 5-6 times a week. Also note that for dieters and the overweight, hunger or the absence of hunger is often a very unreliable method of assessing dietary needs.
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StealthHealth wrote: »crotondo1478 wrote: »goldthistime wrote: »crotondo1478 wrote: »A couple buzz kills in here.
I want you to succeed, and I'll bet everyone else here does too. But to lose 9lbs of fat you would have had to have a deficit of 31,500 calories last week. That is 4500 calories a day. Let's say that you are an active guy and maintain at 3500 calories a day. You would have had to have exercised away another 1000 calories a day and not eaten anything all week long. Or burned 1500 calories a day and eaten only a 500 calories a day. Or some other equally difficult variation.
You should absolutely be thrilled with your success. But just keep in mind that if the scales don't budge (or worse, go backwards) at some time in the next couple of weeks it doesn't necessarily mean that something is wrong with your approach, just that your water retention levels are returning to more normal levels. Keep going!
I exercise 5-6 days a week including an hour on weights and an additional hour on the treadmill. I am averaging about 1200-1400 calorie intake a day and don't feel hungry. When I say 1200, I am not factoring in the exercise. End of week two was today. I weighed in at another 5 lbs lost. That is 14 lbs in 2 weeks. I am only 5 lbs to the so called not overweight BMI. Hopefully I will be there in a week or two and can move to maintaining the weight. Amazingly I am not hungry and feel great!
Sorry, but you are setting yourself up for failure. With this plan, and at your rate of loss, you're losing more lean body mass (muscle) than fat (although as others point out, much of a dieter's first week's loss will be water weight) and this will mean that despite the weight loss you will not look as lean as you hope and when you do decide to maintain weight your calorific intake will need to be lower than you hoped.
I strongly urge you to:- Exercise less - reduce the cardio specifically to a couple or three short sessions and run a progressive strength program for 3 or 4 1 hour sessions per week. Ideally, plan this to give you at least 1 full day off.
- Eat more - 1200 is highly unlikely to be sufficient for a safe rate of loss for a male working out 5-6 times a week. Also note that for dieters and the overweight, hunger or the absence of hunger is often a very unreliable method of assessing dietary needs.
I am trying to figure out exactly what I should have for intake and exercise. Based on research I just did using height, weight, exercise amount, it says that I should be doing the following to lose 1-2 lbs a week...
2500 to maintain
Take 20% off to lose weight.
Approx 2,000 calories
3-4 times on treadmill per week for 1 hour
3-4 times weight training per week for 1 hour
Does that make sense? Eating more has never been a problem for me.2 -
Actually, cardio 3 times a week. And weight training 3-4 times a week?0
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crotondo1478 wrote: »StealthHealth wrote: »crotondo1478 wrote: »goldthistime wrote: »crotondo1478 wrote: »A couple buzz kills in here.
I want you to succeed, and I'll bet everyone else here does too. But to lose 9lbs of fat you would have had to have a deficit of 31,500 calories last week. That is 4500 calories a day. Let's say that you are an active guy and maintain at 3500 calories a day. You would have had to have exercised away another 1000 calories a day and not eaten anything all week long. Or burned 1500 calories a day and eaten only a 500 calories a day. Or some other equally difficult variation.
You should absolutely be thrilled with your success. But just keep in mind that if the scales don't budge (or worse, go backwards) at some time in the next couple of weeks it doesn't necessarily mean that something is wrong with your approach, just that your water retention levels are returning to more normal levels. Keep going!
I exercise 5-6 days a week including an hour on weights and an additional hour on the treadmill. I am averaging about 1200-1400 calorie intake a day and don't feel hungry. When I say 1200, I am not factoring in the exercise. End of week two was today. I weighed in at another 5 lbs lost. That is 14 lbs in 2 weeks. I am only 5 lbs to the so called not overweight BMI. Hopefully I will be there in a week or two and can move to maintaining the weight. Amazingly I am not hungry and feel great!
Sorry, but you are setting yourself up for failure. With this plan, and at your rate of loss, you're losing more lean body mass (muscle) than fat (although as others point out, much of a dieter's first week's loss will be water weight) and this will mean that despite the weight loss you will not look as lean as you hope and when you do decide to maintain weight your calorific intake will need to be lower than you hoped.
I strongly urge you to:- Exercise less - reduce the cardio specifically to a couple or three short sessions and run a progressive strength program for 3 or 4 1 hour sessions per week. Ideally, plan this to give you at least 1 full day off.
- Eat more - 1200 is highly unlikely to be sufficient for a safe rate of loss for a male working out 5-6 times a week. Also note that for dieters and the overweight, hunger or the absence of hunger is often a very unreliable method of assessing dietary needs.
I am trying to figure out exactly what I should have for intake and exercise. Based on research I just did using height, weight, exercise amount, it says that I should be doing the following to lose 1-2 lbs a week...
2500 to maintain
Take 20% off to lose weight.
Approx 2,000 calories
3-4 times on treadmill per week for 1 hour
3-4 times weight training per week for 1 hour
Does that make sense? Eating more has never been a problem for me.
You did some research that led you to the above recommendation but then you ignored that and instead eat about 1300 (700 less than recommendation) per day.
Without knowing your stats it's difficult to comment on the validity of the 2000 cals but what did your research tell you about eating extra to account for the exercise? In other words, does the 2000 cals target take into consideration the 6 -8 hours per week of gym work?0 -
Sorry, That dashed off response now reads as pretty negative.
There are 2 ways in which you can set up your calorie target.- In MFP, plug in your stats and set a weight loss rate. MFP spits out a number which you eat to to lose at approx the rate you specified. With this method you should also log your cardio exercise* and MFP will give you additional calories to eat back.
- Visit a site that helps your calculate your TDEE and plug in your stats. in this instance you will have calculated your daily cals including the exercise you told it you planned to do. Back in MFP, manually set your calories and eat to them each day - in this instance you do not need to log your exercise but if you do, don;t eat back your exercise cals because they are already accounted for in your TDEE.
My preference is the latter because I can't be bothered logging exercise and I like to frequently tweak my calories manually depending on life, the universe, and my current goals.
* MFP doesn't allocate cals for strength work outs because it's highly variable per individual and it's a much lower value than you might assume. Many people feel that MFP overestimates cardio cals and therefore choose only to eat back a portion of those calories. Whatever works for you - it's all a rough estimation anyway.1
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