5’2 females, how are you maintaining?
Replies
-
He is a 5'10" man commenting on a 5'2" women's thread. nuff said. WinoGelato you make a lot of sense. Thanks for vocalizing what I was thinking as I slowly up my calories. While I was losing I would have sworn that my maintenance would have been a lot lower than it is. And over time I think you DO need to keep pushing the envelope UP little by little. Apparently our bodies learn to convert to more energy vs store fat. It has been a pleasant surprise to find myself (like Army wife) still trending down even as I push my cals up! And to whoever woo'd my previous post. I can muse about good vs bad calories if I want. That's my personal experience which I am sharing, not pushing it on anyone else.6
-
SummerSkier wrote: »He is a 5'10" man commenting on a 5'2" women's thread. nuff said. WinoGelato you make a lot of sense. Thanks for vocalizing what I was thinking as I slowly up my calories. While I was losing I would have sworn that my maintenance would have been a lot lower than it is. And over time I think you DO need to keep pushing the envelope UP little by little. Apparently our bodies learn to convert to more energy vs store fat. It has been a pleasant surprise to find myself (like Army wife) still trending down even as I push my cals up! And to whoever woo'd my previous post. I can muse about good vs bad calories if I want. That's my personal experience which I am sharing, not pushing it on anyone else.
I'm pretty sure most 'woo'ers really think the woo button is meant in a positive way but the majority of us see it as woo as in BS, so take it in your case as a positive2 -
RunRutheeRun wrote: »@purpleannex well I think we all can eat far more than we need, because something tastes really good etc. If you have a lot of salad on the side a few slices of pizza is completely filling and adequate. For you as a guy ok you can have a few slices more but it should still fill you up. I've got used to eating less. It is what it is.
Yeah, doesn’t fill me up. Glad it works well for you, but regular thin crust pizza? Takes at least 1/2 a pizza to fill me up. Salad doesn’t fill me up at all - I remain hungry no matter what quantity of salad.
“Should still fill you up”. Not sure how you can say because it fills you up personally it should be the case for everyone, but happy that it works for you. Less than happy that it doesn’t work that way with me.
It is what it is. Totally agree.
6 -
RunRutheeRun wrote: »@purpleannex well I think we all can eat far more than we need, because something tastes really good etc. If you have a lot of salad on the side a few slices of pizza is completely filling and adequate. For you as a guy ok you can have a few slices more but it should still fill you up. I've got used to eating less. It is what it is.
Yeah, doesn’t fill me up. Glad it works well for you, but regular thin crust pizza? Takes at least 1/2 a pizza to fill me up. Salad doesn’t fill me up at all - I remain hungry no matter what quantity of salad.
“Should still fill you up”. Not sure how you can say because it fills you up personally it should be the case for everyone, but happy that it works for you. Less than happy that it doesn’t work that way with me.
It is what it is. Totally agree.
'should' being the operative word. Perhaps I am just so used to smaller portions so its easy enough for me to say that.
I've been eating smaller portions for close on 6 years so my stomach/body has got used to less I suppose and I rarely feel true hunger.4 -
I think we have grown accustomed to eating way too much, to the point where we are hurting. This is why we all decided to lose weight- because our eating habits lead us to being overweight and in some cases obese. Small portions are normal portions, your body and health will thank you. Sure sometimes you have treat meals, you enjoy it and move on. In fact I ate 3 slices of regular pizza last week, and I still continued to lose weight. What is depressing about having health and a good looking body to show for it? No complaints here! Lol eat good, be active, have rest days, have treat meals and life is good.6
-
The woos lol0
-
Armywife04_21 wrote: »The woos lol
Somebody or bodies is on a woo roll today!0 -
So I have been wondering what exactly is a woo supposed to be used for now? I thought it was for statements of ‘fact’ that are not scientifically backed up, but then I see it on lots of posts that would not apply and assume it is a general disagreement thingy now?0
-
purpleannex wrote: »So the conclusion is, if you're a 5'2" female, you have to count calories and eat tiny amounts for the rest of your life, if you want to maintain low weight. For those of you on higher maintenance numbers, 2300 kcal's, you can't even eat one pizza, that's one meal!
I'm 5'2" and I don't ever count calories...I'm eating one big meal a day during the week and on the weekend I Splurge and I've been maintaining within a 3 pound range for 7 months4 -
CoachJen71 wrote: »Congrats!
I'm 5'2.5", 46yo, post-menopausal.
Maintaining 120ish at 1300 or so sedentary, but usually aim for 20k walking steps a day, plus I do some strength work (not wearing the Fitbit then, tho.) Can eat 1800 cals or so for a 20K step day, unless I have been hiking hills. I can get an extra 300-500 cals depending upon how challenging the hike is.
The weight difference between a cut and maintenance (factoring in glycogen, sodium, accompanying water, and the food baby) seems to be about 4lbs for me.
Same here. I am 5'3 and when I make 20000/25000 walkings steps a day I can maintain when I eat 'round 1800/1900 cal. Oh, my weight is 115lbs.1 -
igniscordis wrote: »CoachJen71 wrote: »Congrats!
I'm 5'2.5", 46yo, post-menopausal.
Maintaining 120ish at 1300 or so sedentary, but usually aim for 20k walking steps a day, plus I do some strength work (not wearing the Fitbit then, tho.) Can eat 1800 cals or so for a 20K step day, unless I have been hiking hills. I can get an extra 300-500 cals depending upon how challenging the hike is.
The weight difference between a cut and maintenance (factoring in glycogen, sodium, accompanying water, and the food baby) seems to be about 4lbs for me.
Same here. I am 5'3 and when I make 20000/25000 walkings steps a day I can maintain when I eat 'round 1800/1900 cal. Oh, my weight is 115lbs.
But considering that most tracking their steps people aim for 10,000 steps per day, 20,000-25,000 steps would amount to another hour and a half of walking each day. Or a total of 10+ miles.
Makes it seem that shorter women have to do twice the exercise if we want to eat like our taller counterparts.1 -
So I have been wondering what exactly is a woo supposed to be used for now? I thought it was for statements of ‘fact’ that are not scientifically backed up, but then I see it on lots of posts that would not apply and assume it is a general disagreement thingy now?
Most people don't use it as a positive meaning but rather a negative one. Apparenrly it can be used for either meaning which is rather stupid.0 -
I'm not happy with my weight loss. Started October 9, 2017 at 179 and wanted to get down to what I was back in January 2017 at 165. When I got hospitalized for pulmonary embolism, I wasn't active and so I gained weight uup to 180. I have been very good at exercising since I'm a long distance runner. I have dropped to 176 and dippped at times to 172 but not for long. I've always been short of my goal calories and still not lost the weight. Holding today at 176, just frustrating
1 -
SummerSkier wrote: »that's a VERY interesting statement. ...And not to say CICO is not the end game, but I notice that eating "clean" for me seems like I can eat MORE than if I eat junk. Calorie wise AND volume wise of course. I know we say a calorie is a calorie but some of the junk I think my fat cells like to grab on to. (just musing not starting an argument). 5'1.75" maintain at around 99-100 , 59 years old. Not really all that active although I do try to run daily.
There is a theory that we burn more calories digesting protein. Maybe that ties in with your anecdotal evidence regarding being able to eat more clean foods? Alternatively, small portions of lower cal foods spread throughout the day feels like more food to me than a few higher cal meals, so I feel like I am eating more because I eat more often.
1 -
I, too, believe in the high, lean protein diet....as well as 3 meals in moderation along with 2 healthy snacks throughout the day. It takes energy to digest that food.....so keep digesting! And it takes more energy to burn protein and fiber. Smaller meals keeps the stomach at a moderate size and keeps the appetite under control! And I mean healthy snacks, not junk food! Nuts, trail mix, yogurt....I aim for 10-15 grams of protein in a snack....and you won’t find that in a bag of chips!1
-
I'm 5'3" 119lbs and I'm currently trying to shed the Christmas belly and love handles. It's weird because I've been having a calorie deficit, under 1000 when I'm supposed to be just over 1700 and I honestly haven't lost a significant amount of weight. I'm actually trying to bulk up. I try to work out 3 times a week atleast.0
-
I guess I responded to this post already0
-
TeacupsAndToning wrote: »I'm a touch taller - I'm 5'3". Originally I lost about 12 pounds and ended up at 115 but the weight kept coming off and I went all the way down, by mistake, to about 105. I'm trying to creep back up and so far I've been successful and I'm coming in closer to 110 now which I'm alright with.
I set my maintenance to 1700 but I kept loosing so I'm upping it by 100 cal increments. For the next few weeks I'll try 1800 (which is great since it's the holiday season) and if I maintain here then I'll stay at 1800 and if I keep losing then I'll up it again.
I only work out three times a week - I do strength training Monday, Wednesday and Friday.
Hello, I’m currently 125 with a heigh of 5”2, goal weight would be ideally between 110-115. Wondering how you lost those 12 pounds when you were 127? Currently doing the Kayla Itness book 2-3 Days a week. And one day a week I go running for 5 miles.
0 -
I'm 5ft and maintaining at 120lb with 1,200 a day (my job is sedentary. As in, I sit at a desk and don't move for 40 hours a week) but when I do exercise I get to eat the calories back. I want to drop another 5lb, but dread the thoughts of having to cut any more calories and just can't find time to exercise this time of year (to dark to go for a run, no space for work out DVD and the nearest gym is a 40 min drive away).
I'm hoping in the summer when I can go for runs and work out outside I'll be able to drop the last few pounds and hit my 115 goal.1 -
I'm 5ft and maintaining at 120lb with 1,200 a day (my job is sedentary. As in, I sit at a desk and don't move for 40 hours a week) but when I do exercise I get to eat the calories back. I want to drop another 5lb, but dread the thoughts of having to cut any more calories and just can't find time to exercise this time of year (to dark to go for a run, no space for work out DVD and the nearest gym is a 40 min drive away).
I'm hoping in the summer when I can go for runs and work out outside I'll be able to drop the last few pounds and hit my 115 goal.
You'll find when the summer comes those extra pounds will just disappear. If you really want to do a workout Jessica Smith (youtube) specialises in indoor workouts where there is hardly any room (i.e she just uses the space of a yoga mat) to workout.1 -
Noreenmarie1234 wrote: »WinoGelato wrote: »For the women in here maintaining at 1500 or below - is that before exercise? Because many of you seem pretty active and that seems kind of low. How accurate is your logging? Have you tried reverse dieting to slowly add calories to see if maintenance is actually a little higher? Most people that assume because they are petite they must eat low cals to lose and then maintain are often surprised to find that if they increase 50-100 cals at a time slowly, that their maintenance number is higher than they would have previously thought, and for those who are active, that's certainly the case, and even without strenuous exercise, just having a higher NEAT from walking and ancillary movement can have an impact on how much you can eat.
This was true for me. I maintained at around 1700 for a year with exercise but then slowly added and found I could maintain at 2100-2600. Been maintaining same weight for 2 years now.
Can someone PLEASE tell me how this is possible? I’m 5 feet tall, 95 lbs and my maintenance is about 1350. This is according to MFP and it seems pretty accurate to me. How can you maintain at 1700 then all of a sudden also maintain at almost thousand calories more?
My calories are frustrating low.
3 -
Noreenmarie1234 wrote: »WinoGelato wrote: »For the women in here maintaining at 1500 or below - is that before exercise? Because many of you seem pretty active and that seems kind of low. How accurate is your logging? Have you tried reverse dieting to slowly add calories to see if maintenance is actually a little higher? Most people that assume because they are petite they must eat low cals to lose and then maintain are often surprised to find that if they increase 50-100 cals at a time slowly, that their maintenance number is higher than they would have previously thought, and for those who are active, that's certainly the case, and even without strenuous exercise, just having a higher NEAT from walking and ancillary movement can have an impact on how much you can eat.
This was true for me. I maintained at around 1700 for a year with exercise but then slowly added and found I could maintain at 2100-2600. Been maintaining same weight for 2 years now.
Can someone PLEASE tell me how this is possible? I’m 5 feet tall, 95 lbs and my maintenance is about 1350. This is according to MFP and it seems pretty accurate to me. How can you maintain at 1700 then all of a sudden also maintain at almost thousand calories more?
My calories are frustrating low.
3 -
Noreenmarie1234 wrote: »WinoGelato wrote: »For the women in here maintaining at 1500 or below - is that before exercise? Because many of you seem pretty active and that seems kind of low. How accurate is your logging? Have you tried reverse dieting to slowly add calories to see if maintenance is actually a little higher? Most people that assume because they are petite they must eat low cals to lose and then maintain are often surprised to find that if they increase 50-100 cals at a time slowly, that their maintenance number is higher than they would have previously thought, and for those who are active, that's certainly the case, and even without strenuous exercise, just having a higher NEAT from walking and ancillary movement can have an impact on how much you can eat.
This was true for me. I maintained at around 1700 for a year with exercise but then slowly added and found I could maintain at 2100-2600. Been maintaining same weight for 2 years now.
Can someone PLEASE tell me how this is possible? I’m 5 feet tall, 95 lbs and my maintenance is about 1350. This is according to MFP and it seems pretty accurate to me. How can you maintain at 1700 then all of a sudden also maintain at almost thousand calories more?
My calories are frustrating low.
Those of us who can eat alot more than the norm just move more in general. According to TDEE calculators I should only be maintaining on 1600 cals being lightly active but the reality is I maintain on nearer 2000 despite being only 5ft 2. (I do have quite a lot of muscle).1 -
Can someone PLEASE tell me how this is possible? I’m 5 feet tall, 95 lbs and my maintenance is about 1350. This is according to MFP and it seems pretty accurate to me. How can you maintain at 1700 then all of a sudden also maintain at almost thousand calories more?
My calories are frustrating low.
There's a reason why so many of us are cardio queens.1 -
Noreenmarie1234 wrote: »WinoGelato wrote: »For the women in here maintaining at 1500 or below - is that before exercise? Because many of you seem pretty active and that seems kind of low. How accurate is your logging? Have you tried reverse dieting to slowly add calories to see if maintenance is actually a little higher? Most people that assume because they are petite they must eat low cals to lose and then maintain are often surprised to find that if they increase 50-100 cals at a time slowly, that their maintenance number is higher than they would have previously thought, and for those who are active, that's certainly the case, and even without strenuous exercise, just having a higher NEAT from walking and ancillary movement can have an impact on how much you can eat.
This was true for me. I maintained at around 1700 for a year with exercise but then slowly added and found I could maintain at 2100-2600. Been maintaining same weight for 2 years now.
Can someone PLEASE tell me how this is possible? I’m 5 feet tall, 95 lbs and my maintenance is about 1350. This is according to MFP and it seems pretty accurate to me. How can you maintain at 1700 then all of a sudden also maintain at almost thousand calories more?
My calories are frustrating low.
How active are you? How long have you been eating at that level? Did you lose weight to reach your current weight and are now in maintenance? Do you have a maintenance range? Have you dieted often, and have you cut calories very low when you do? How accurate is your logging?
As others have said it's a trial and error process. Start by adding 50 or 100 extra calories and stick with that for several weeks. Aside from any temporary water weight gains, if no additional impact is seen then increase again in a few weeks. The other key is keeping activity high - you don't have to go balls to the walls with exercise but many of us who have higher than average TDEE for our height get a lot of steps or are otherwise active - I average 12-15k steps and that's not just from exercise.
You are also 2 inches shorter and about 15 lbs lighter than me so I would expect a little lower maintenance level but I would imagine you could increase from 1350, especially if you're active.4 -
I'm 50 y.o. & 5'3 & I do walk daily as an exercise. I typically don't do cardio but I'm physically active. My maintenance is no where near 2000 and I'm fine with that. I think I would get sick of eating if I had to down that much food a day. Age also probably should be considered as a factor, maybe not a huge one.. but somewhat.0
-
I think between the vagueness of what constitutes each activity level for MFP and other calculators and the wide range of TDEEs due just to genetics, it's no wonder some people are frustrated by seeing other people's numbers. (I am always a bit bummed to see hubby's numbers after we hiked the exact same freaking trail! LOL)
I like Sailrabbit's calculator. MFP seems to be a slightly more generous Mifflin St. Jeor algorithm. For myself, I _think_ MFP's activity levels roughly correlate to my steps as follows:
Sedentary: 6.5K (Hard to say. I'm never sitting for a whole day!)
Lightly active: 11K
Active: 16K
Very Active: 21K
I try to walk at least 20K steps per day, lift little weights and do bodyweight exercises 4-5 days a week, and hike at least a couple times a month if the weather cooperates. Some months this past year I logged no major hikes, others I put in 15-30 miles in major hikes. (I only count small hikes as contributing to my daily walking steps, so no eating out after a short, flat nature walk unless I have been banking.)
Anyway, this stuff is the reason I am a data nut. I just want to pin my numbers down better.3 -
WinoGelato wrote: »Noreenmarie1234 wrote: »WinoGelato wrote: »For the women in here maintaining at 1500 or below - is that before exercise? Because many of you seem pretty active and that seems kind of low. How accurate is your logging? Have you tried reverse dieting to slowly add calories to see if maintenance is actually a little higher? Most people that assume because they are petite they must eat low cals to lose and then maintain are often surprised to find that if they increase 50-100 cals at a time slowly, that their maintenance number is higher than they would have previously thought, and for those who are active, that's certainly the case, and even without strenuous exercise, just having a higher NEAT from walking and ancillary movement can have an impact on how much you can eat.
This was true for me. I maintained at around 1700 for a year with exercise but then slowly added and found I could maintain at 2100-2600. Been maintaining same weight for 2 years now.
Can someone PLEASE tell me how this is possible? I’m 5 feet tall, 95 lbs and my maintenance is about 1350. This is according to MFP and it seems pretty accurate to me. How can you maintain at 1700 then all of a sudden also maintain at almost thousand calories more?
My calories are frustrating low.
How active are you? How long have you been eating at that level? Did you lose weight to reach your current weight and are now in maintenance? Do you have a maintenance range? Have you dieted often, and have you cut calories very low when you do? How accurate is your logging?
As others have said it's a trial and error process. Start by adding 50 or 100 extra calories and stick with that for several weeks. Aside from any temporary water weight gains, if no additional impact is seen then increase again in a few weeks. The other key is keeping activity high - you don't have to go balls to the walls with exercise but many of us who have higher than average TDEE for our height get a lot of steps or are otherwise active - I average 12-15k steps and that's not just from exercise.
You are also 2 inches shorter and about 15 lbs lighter than me so I would expect a little lower maintenance level but I would imagine you could increase from 1350, especially if you're active.
I am not very active, I have two jobs, work 7 days a week and also go to graduate school. Both jobs and school are sedentary. I do jog at the park a few times a week when the weather is okay, but according to my research my 3 mile jog/walk is only counting for 180ish calories burned.
I have only been in maintenance for about a month, and I was on a 1000 calorie diet to lose about a pound a week I haven't gained anything on 1350 but haven't lost anything either.
I don't understand the concept of 'reverse dieting', if I'm maintaining at 1350 with little exercise, how can I just add calories and maintain without increasing activity? I understand I have not been in maintenance for a long time, but I can't just imagine eating more calories, not burning them off, and staying the same weight.
3 -
I'm 5ft1 and maintained within a few pounds a weight of 121 until recently. I hand my master thesis in in 10 days and then i plan to take these extra few pounds off and make my new goal 119 which is 8st7. Oh and I am 45 in June1
-
WinoGelato wrote: »Noreenmarie1234 wrote: »WinoGelato wrote: »For the women in here maintaining at 1500 or below - is that before exercise? Because many of you seem pretty active and that seems kind of low. How accurate is your logging? Have you tried reverse dieting to slowly add calories to see if maintenance is actually a little higher? Most people that assume because they are petite they must eat low cals to lose and then maintain are often surprised to find that if they increase 50-100 cals at a time slowly, that their maintenance number is higher than they would have previously thought, and for those who are active, that's certainly the case, and even without strenuous exercise, just having a higher NEAT from walking and ancillary movement can have an impact on how much you can eat.
This was true for me. I maintained at around 1700 for a year with exercise but then slowly added and found I could maintain at 2100-2600. Been maintaining same weight for 2 years now.
Can someone PLEASE tell me how this is possible? I’m 5 feet tall, 95 lbs and my maintenance is about 1350. This is according to MFP and it seems pretty accurate to me. How can you maintain at 1700 then all of a sudden also maintain at almost thousand calories more?
My calories are frustrating low.
How active are you? How long have you been eating at that level? Did you lose weight to reach your current weight and are now in maintenance? Do you have a maintenance range? Have you dieted often, and have you cut calories very low when you do? How accurate is your logging?
As others have said it's a trial and error process. Start by adding 50 or 100 extra calories and stick with that for several weeks. Aside from any temporary water weight gains, if no additional impact is seen then increase again in a few weeks. The other key is keeping activity high - you don't have to go balls to the walls with exercise but many of us who have higher than average TDEE for our height get a lot of steps or are otherwise active - I average 12-15k steps and that's not just from exercise.
You are also 2 inches shorter and about 15 lbs lighter than me so I would expect a little lower maintenance level but I would imagine you could increase from 1350, especially if you're active.
I am not very active, I have two jobs, work 7 days a week and also go to graduate school. Both jobs and school are sedentary. I do jog at the park a few times a week when the weather is okay, but according to my research my 3 mile jog/walk is only counting for 180ish calories burned.
I have only been in maintenance for about a month, and I was on a 1000 calorie diet to lose about a pound a week I haven't gained anything on 1350 but haven't lost anything either.
I don't understand the concept of 'reverse dieting', if I'm maintaining at 1350 with little exercise, how can I just add calories and maintain without increasing activity? I understand I have not been in maintenance for a long time, but I can't just imagine eating more calories, not burning them off, and staying the same weight.
First - losing a pound a week if you didn't have a lot to lose is pretty aggressive. How long were you eating at 1000 calories? Most people reduce their rate of loss to 0.5 lb/week as they get closer to goal, to help ease that transition into maintenance.
Second, if you were losing a pound per week, then your maintenance is presumably 1500, not 1350. If you've been steady for about a month at that level, add another 50-100 and see what happens. You may see a short blip from water weight but may level off.
Most people have a maintenance range of 3-5 lbs that they naturally fluctuate within. Are you comfortable with your weight going back up slightly as part of the process of finding your true maintenance numbers?
When you do exercise, do you eat back those calories?
Certainly increasing activity would help you push that maintenance cals up but again, it doesn't have to be a strenuous activity. I have a desk job but get up and move as often as possible - it's sometimes not possible but any chance you get to walk on breaks could help.
Read the thread linked above, called "of refeeds and diet breaks" it has a lot of great info about the science behind working to up calories and the impact long term aggressive dieting has on our bodies.1
This discussion has been closed.
Categories
- All Categories
- 1.4M Health, Wellness and Goals
- 393.6K Introduce Yourself
- 43.8K Getting Started
- 260.3K Health and Weight Loss
- 176K Food and Nutrition
- 47.5K Recipes
- 232.6K Fitness and Exercise
- 431 Sleep, Mindfulness and Overall Wellness
- 6.5K Goal: Maintaining Weight
- 8.6K Goal: Gaining Weight and Body Building
- 153K Motivation and Support
- 8K Challenges
- 1.3K Debate Club
- 96.3K Chit-Chat
- 2.5K Fun and Games
- 3.8K MyFitnessPal Information
- 24 News and Announcements
- 1.1K Feature Suggestions and Ideas
- 2.6K MyFitnessPal Tech Support Questions