Eating 1000 calories a day?

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  • Christine_72
    Christine_72 Posts: 16,049 Member
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    cwolfman13 wrote: »
    lucerorojo wrote: »
    What kind of doctors do you folks go to? No matter what I go in for, the first thing they do is put me on a scale and weigh, and then take blood pressure.

    I am also confused by the OP. If all she eats is 800-900 of fruits and vegetables calories, how did she get to be 200 lbs.??

    The only time I've been weighed and measured was when i was asking the doctor about weight loss pills. My height and weight is completely irrelevant to what i usually visit the doctor for.

    Weird...they take my BP, height, and weight every time I go in before I even see the doctor. The only time they don't is if I'm just going in to get blood work done only.

    I'd think they'd at least do this at an annual physical at minimum?

    I *think the annual physical is more a US thing. The only physical/health check I've EVER had done was my 45 year old physical, and all they did there was weigh and measure me, checked my blood pressure and asked me some yes/no questions. No blood work or anything.
    Most people get a letter from their doctor in the post a couple months before they turn 45 recommending they come in for a check, probably happens at 50 and 60 years old too, but i'm not there yet :smiley:
  • Meelisv
    Meelisv Posts: 235 Member
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    cwolfman13 wrote: »
    lucerorojo wrote: »
    What kind of doctors do you folks go to? No matter what I go in for, the first thing they do is put me on a scale and weigh, and then take blood pressure.

    I am also confused by the OP. If all she eats is 800-900 of fruits and vegetables calories, how did she get to be 200 lbs.??

    The only time I've been weighed and measured was when i was asking the doctor about weight loss pills. My height and weight is completely irrelevant to what i usually visit the doctor for.

    Weird...they take my BP, height, and weight every time I go in before I even see the doctor. The only time they don't is if I'm just going in to get blood work done only.

    I'd think they'd at least do this at an annual physical at minimum?

    Must be an US thing.
    I'm an European, 40 now, and last time a doctor measured my height or weighed me without me specially requesting it was at school about 25 years ago.
    Blood pressure is also taken only if I go to see a doctor with a complaint that assumes it. There is no mandatory yearly checkup and most people don't just randomly walk into doctors office unless there's some issue that need to be looked at.
  • AnnPT77
    AnnPT77 Posts: 32,382 Member
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    Meelisv wrote: »
    cwolfman13 wrote: »
    lucerorojo wrote: »
    What kind of doctors do you folks go to? No matter what I go in for, the first thing they do is put me on a scale and weigh, and then take blood pressure.

    I am also confused by the OP. If all she eats is 800-900 of fruits and vegetables calories, how did she get to be 200 lbs.??

    The only time I've been weighed and measured was when i was asking the doctor about weight loss pills. My height and weight is completely irrelevant to what i usually visit the doctor for.

    Weird...they take my BP, height, and weight every time I go in before I even see the doctor. The only time they don't is if I'm just going in to get blood work done only.

    I'd think they'd at least do this at an annual physical at minimum?

    Must be an US thing.
    I'm an European, 40 now, and last time a doctor measured my height or weighed me without me specially requesting it was at school about 25 years ago.
    Blood pressure is also taken only if I go to see a doctor with a complaint that assumes it. There is no mandatory yearly checkup and most people don't just randomly walk into doctors office unless there's some issue that need to be looked at.

    Not a US thing. I'm in the US. I've got a bazillion doctors. Pretty much no one measures height even though I have diagnosed osteopenia and am shrinking.

    GP (every 6 months, 'cos thyroid) checks weight & BP and orders TSH/lipids every time, other stuff (liver panel, Vit D, B12 whatever) now and then. Osteopath (manipulation for back nonsense, every 6 weeks or so) checks BP, sometimes asks about weight. Oncologist (annual) checks weight and BP. There are also gynecologist (biannual, BP and PAP), dermatologist (random), orthopedist (ditto), retinologist (annual now, I think), pulmonologist (sleep disorder, irregular) not to mention opthalmologist and dentist and probably some I'm forgetting.

    Kids, yer gonna love aging.

    I think the osteoporosis specialist (irregular, overdue) will probably measure height.

    Sorry, OP, this rant - & probably the whole height-measuring sub-thread - is off topic.

    OP: Have a friend help you measure height. It will take seconds, and help you pin down information you need.
  • lynn_glenmont
    lynn_glenmont Posts: 9,986 Member
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    zamphir66 wrote: »
    greyphan wrote: »
    Mslmesq wrote: »
    Yes, of course you should eat more than that!

    But more importantly, how at 23 years old do you not know how tall you are? Seriously.

    The last time I️ was measured I️ was 10. I️ know I’ve grown and inch or two since then, just not sure precisely how much. I️ know I’m really short, I️ just don’t see the point in knowing my height too precisely.

    Have you not been to the doctor since you were 10? Every time I go to the doctor I get my weight, height, blood pressure, blood oxygen, and pulse, at the very least taken. I mean, this is all part of your medical file.

    I don't recall the doctor taking any of those measurements in the ~3 times I've been since I was 16. They weren't relevant to the problem at hand so I wouldn't expect them to take all that time to do it!

    OP, maybe trying drinking some calories if the problem is that you feel full - almond milk, or a smoothie with seeds/nut butter etc. But keep at it until you find something that works for you. Also make sure you're logging accurately and not actually eating more than you think you are.

    I'm sorry, but you have a terrible doctor. There's no way to know if the data is revelant to "the problem at hand" if he or she doesn't gather the data.
  • kayeroze
    kayeroze Posts: 146 Member
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    I have two thoughts on this.

    If you’re not being monitored by a doctor, at your height and weight, you probably could get away with 1000-1200 calories a day if you really are between 5’1-5’3 without too many issues as long as you focus on the right foods. Your sedentary tdee is going to be fairly low most likely (I’m 5’2, 198 lbs, and my tdee last time I checked was 1800 calories about).

    On the other hand, if you go to a doctor and ask to lose weight and they prescribe a very low calorie diet that is regularly monitored, then at a higher weight plus short height, many times you can go on with limited calories for a short, monitored time to rapidly lose weight and get out of a dangerous weight zone.

    In this particular case, I’m going to go with the first. If you ate 1000 today or 1000 in a few weeks, but normally eat like 1200ish on other days, you should be fine. If your veganism is recent, you tend to lose weight because of what you can eat. Try supplementing more fats into your diet to increase calories without the fiber.
  • Rosemary7391
    Rosemary7391 Posts: 232 Member
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    zamphir66 wrote: »
    greyphan wrote: »
    Mslmesq wrote: »
    Yes, of course you should eat more than that!

    But more importantly, how at 23 years old do you not know how tall you are? Seriously.

    The last time I️ was measured I️ was 10. I️ know I’ve grown and inch or two since then, just not sure precisely how much. I️ know I’m really short, I️ just don’t see the point in knowing my height too precisely.

    Have you not been to the doctor since you were 10? Every time I go to the doctor I get my weight, height, blood pressure, blood oxygen, and pulse, at the very least taken. I mean, this is all part of your medical file.

    I don't recall the doctor taking any of those measurements in the ~3 times I've been since I was 16. They weren't relevant to the problem at hand so I wouldn't expect them to take all that time to do it!

    OP, maybe trying drinking some calories if the problem is that you feel full - almond milk, or a smoothie with seeds/nut butter etc. But keep at it until you find something that works for you. Also make sure you're logging accurately and not actually eating more than you think you are.


    4 woos for that? Why!? Maybe the almond milk wasn't the best suggestion (thanks to the person below me) although it still has some calories so not total nonsense...
  • Rosemary7391
    Rosemary7391 Posts: 232 Member
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    zamphir66 wrote: »
    greyphan wrote: »
    Mslmesq wrote: »
    Yes, of course you should eat more than that!

    But more importantly, how at 23 years old do you not know how tall you are? Seriously.

    The last time I️ was measured I️ was 10. I️ know I’ve grown and inch or two since then, just not sure precisely how much. I️ know I’m really short, I️ just don’t see the point in knowing my height too precisely.

    Have you not been to the doctor since you were 10? Every time I go to the doctor I get my weight, height, blood pressure, blood oxygen, and pulse, at the very least taken. I mean, this is all part of your medical file.

    I don't recall the doctor taking any of those measurements in the ~3 times I've been since I was 16. They weren't relevant to the problem at hand so I wouldn't expect them to take all that time to do it!

    OP, maybe trying drinking some calories if the problem is that you feel full - almond milk, or a smoothie with seeds/nut butter etc. But keep at it until you find something that works for you. Also make sure you're logging accurately and not actually eating more than you think you are.

    I'm sorry, but you have a terrible doctor. There's no way to know if the data is revelant to "the problem at hand" if he or she doesn't gather the data.

    Then why don't they always ask for your job title* at doctor's visits? I mean that's data, right? Seriously, it's impractical to get even all the relevant data, nevermind all the data, so I'm happy to trust that the medical professional will ask for appropriate relevant data until a solution is found, unless I receive an indication that they're not competent.

    *In case you're wondering where that came from - one visit my conversation went like this:
    Me: Here is the problem...
    Doctor: You're a student right? Just done your finals?
    Me: Yep
    Doctor: Your problem is most likely caused by stress; I can offer you a prescription to treat the symptom and it'll likely clear up entirely in a few months.

    She appeared to be right, since the prescription worked and the problem resolved itself. No need for any more invasive tests or anything. In fact, getting the prescription and seeing it resolved in a couple of days really reduced my stress levels. A barrage of tests might've actually made the problem worse since it was caused by stress.
  • netitheyeti
    netitheyeti Posts: 539 Member
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    maybe a bit off topic: but your doctors really measure you every time? I'm 27, the last time someone measured me was when I was still a teenager and it was a school checkup (eyesight, weight, height, dentist kinda thing)... I was weighed when I went to get my thyroid and hormones (for PCOS) checked out and when I got BC pills (+ they checked my blood pressure), but they never looked at my height... to this day I'm not sure how tall I am (but I'm guessing between 5'2 and 5'3)
  • Lesscookies1
    Lesscookies1 Posts: 250 Member
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    Op what's your current weight now? Have you been losing weight? Do you use a food scale to track your intake?
  • FlyingMolly
    FlyingMolly Posts: 490 Member
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    maybe a bit off topic: but your doctors really measure you every time? I'm 27, the last time someone measured me was when I was still a teenager and it was a school checkup (eyesight, weight, height, dentist kinda thing)... I was weighed when I went to get my thyroid and hormones (for PCOS) checked out and when I got BC pills (+ they checked my blood pressure), but they never looked at my height... to this day I'm not sure how tall I am (but I'm guessing between 5'2 and 5'3)

    Okay, but OP’s saying he hasn’t been measured since he was ten. GPs may or may not measure patients at every exam, but pediatricians do. Was OP just not taken to regular pediatric visits from the age of 10 on? It’s concerning.
  • amtyrell
    amtyrell Posts: 1,449 Member
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    Ok you need a pencil and some measuring device. Stand against a doorwayhead against the side bare feet. Stand up strait. Put the pencil flat against the top of your head and make a mark on the door sill strait back. Now measuring device measure from floor to mark. That is your height. Now erase the pencil mark.
  • netitheyeti
    netitheyeti Posts: 539 Member
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    maybe a bit off topic: but your doctors really measure you every time? I'm 27, the last time someone measured me was when I was still a teenager and it was a school checkup (eyesight, weight, height, dentist kinda thing)... I was weighed when I went to get my thyroid and hormones (for PCOS) checked out and when I got BC pills (+ they checked my blood pressure), but they never looked at my height... to this day I'm not sure how tall I am (but I'm guessing between 5'2 and 5'3)

    Okay, but OP’s saying he hasn’t been measured since he was ten. GPs may or may not measure patients at every exam, but pediatricians do. Was OP just not taken to regular pediatric visits from the age of 10 on? It’s concerning.

    aaah, apologies, I think I misread 10 as 16 (which is roughly when *I* was last measured, I think)
  • UltraVegAthlete
    UltraVegAthlete Posts: 667 Member
    edited February 2018
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    I’ve taken a break from counting calories, but I can eat between 1500-3000 calories depending on the day and my activity and what I eat.
    I, too, am 100% Vegan. I try to only eat whole plant based foods, so lots of fruit and vegetables. If I go over my calories, it’s because of the dried fruit or popcorn.
    To lose the weight, focus on eating what your body wants. For me, that usually means fruit for breakfast, steamed vegetables for my second meal, and then sometimes dried fruit. And try to stay active.