I swear I have tried every which way.....
dimplz1965
Posts: 105 Member
Eat back exercise calories, don't eat them back, increase my daily calories, only eat what MFP gives me. ARRGGHH! I have gained and lost the same 1.5 to 2 pounds for at least a month. I don't want to lose all the weight at once, settle for 1/2 to 1 pound a week, that's all. Measuring - yep, done that and there's very little change. I just need to vent. I know I'm eating healthier, with a few slip ups here and there, and I'm exercising almost every day, with rest when I need it or time doesn't allow me that day. I will keep at it though. I have a goal to lose 20 pounds by the end of the year; that's 5 months to lose 20 pounds, which is doable! Any other advice? I will make my diary available for public view.
Thanks.
Laura
Thanks.
Laura
0
Replies
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Perhaps you're not doing your experiments for a long enough amount of time??? If you've tried all those different options in just the last month, you might just need to pick a way to do things and do it for a MONTH and then if that doesn't work, switch.0
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Let me preface my post by telling you that I'm not going to be of any help- I'm having the same problem! It seems like no matter what I change, it doesn't make any difference. So at least you might feel a little better knowing it's not just you! Hopefully you'll get some good suggestions that I can try too. Keep at it though, don't lose your motivation!!0
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Maybe strength training to build some muscle? Worth a shot.0
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One week's time is not long enough to gauge efficacy of an approach.
Also, how are you tracking your calories? Are you using a food scale? For EVERYTHING?0 -
What are your preferred exercises? Sometimes you get really good results changing up what you do for cardio - if you always do the elliptical, try walking on an incline on the treadmill, stairstepper, etc. Keep your body guessing and it's forced to adapt. Otherwise it becomes very efficient at what you ask it to do and you'll burn less calories. I don't think MFP accounts for that.0
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Perhaps you're not doing your experiments for a long enough amount of time??? If you've tried all those different options in just the last month, you might just need to pick a way to do things and do it for a MONTH and then if that doesn't work, switch.
Yeah, that's a good point. Stick with a certain routine for a little longer to see if it pays off.0 -
I looked back in your diary and I don't really see you eating fresh veggies...potatoes don't really do anything for you. You gotta eat broccoli, cauliflower (those 2 help you drop weight like crazy) beans, artichokes, bellpeppers, cucumbers. You can get creative. I would also try to drop your bread intake by half. Just to give yourself more calories for the fresh foods. You're good on the yogurt and the fruit. Try intaking MORE veggies.0
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Eat back exercise calories, don't eat them back, increase my daily calories, only eat what MFP gives me. ARRGGHH! I have gained and lost the same 1.5 to 2 pounds for at least a month. I don't want to lose all the weight at once, settle for 1/2 to 1 pound a week, that's all. Measuring - yep, done that and there's very little change. I just need to vent. I know I'm eating healthier, with a few slip ups here and there, and I'm exercising almost every day, with rest when I need it or time doesn't allow me that day. I will keep at it though. I have a goal to lose 20 pounds by the end of the year; that's 5 months to lose 20 pounds, which is doable! Any other advice? I will make my diary available for public view.
I go through the same periods where for a month or two, I'll gain and lose the same 2 pounds over and over again. So, I don't have a real answer for you... Have you tried lower carb v. higher carb, etc?
Also, I j ust browsed a week or two of your diaries and I to notice you do "quick calorie" adds a lot and conveniently sometimes those come out to making you exactly dead even on your daily calorie count. Are you sorta cheating by doing that?0 -
Perhaps you're not doing your experiments for a long enough amount of time??? If you've tried all those different options in just the last month, you might just need to pick a way to do things and do it for a MONTH and then if that doesn't work, switch.
This was my thought. If you've done all that in a month you haven't stuck with any of them for long. Choose one and stick to it for a few weeks. I agree with the strength training too, if you aren't doing that already. If you are, you may push yourself a bit harder there.0 -
Are you measuring your food to ensure your eating the correct quantity, or are you just eyeballing it? Maybe you are understating your caloric intake? Make sure you measure or weigh everything you eat.
Maybe invest in a good HRM? That way you can be more precise about the number of calories you are burning - it isn't 100% accurate, but closer than guessing which is what MFP does when you insert your activity level.0 -
Perhaps you're not doing your experiments for a long enough amount of time??? If you've tried all those different options in just the last month, you might just need to pick a way to do things and do it for a MONTH and then if that doesn't work, switch.
That was going to be my suggestion.0 -
I looked at your food diary for about the past week and I think you could improve on fresh fruits and vegetables. Overall your diary looks fairly healthy. But an increase of nutrients, vitamins, and fiber and water that naturally come in fresh fruits and fresh vegetables (not counting potatoes) will give you a nice boost.
Maybe make a goal of eating your calories every day PLUS eating 5 a day fruits & vegetables and see what that difference alone makes over two weeks.
I'd also encourage you to listen to fat2fitradio podcasts. They are free and full of motivation and sound advice.0 -
I was having the same problem, too, but then I joined MFP. When I studied my food diary, I realized that I was eating too many carbs. I've cut back on them, and viola, I'm losing weight. Just my 2 cents.0
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You are eating a lot of bread, potaoes, and pastas, which adds up to many carbs at the end of the day. Try eating more clean foods like veggies, fruits , nuts, fats. and protein. That should help:)0
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The single most important secret to losing weight is to be accurate in your calculations.
Is your activity level correct? Ie: Do you choose "active" when you're actually "sedentary"?
Is your goal reasonable? If you only need to lose 10-20 pounds, a 2 pound a week goals is probably not going to work. The less you have to lose, the smaller your weekly loss goal needs to be. Your body is much less inclined to let go of your fat when you have a lot less of it stored.
Is your food logging precise? Are you measuring and weighing and logging every bite? Those handful of fries off your son's plate? The spoonful of ice cream when you dish up your husband's bowl? The olive oil you cooked with? The cream in your coffee? Do you ever cheat yourself by choosing a food from the database that's similar to what you ate, but is the lowest calorie thing there? (ie: chocolate cake can range from 125kc to 1000kc for a slice - are you choosing the lowest one?)
Are you sure of your exercise burns? Are you really burning 500 calories during a session? Or is it possible that you're only burning 300? Maybe your "fast walk" isn't so fast after all? If you are eating back your exercise calories and aren't actually burning as much as you're eating, you may very well be eliminating your deficit (or part of it).
And then, stick to it for at least a month, six weeks is better, before you give up and try something else. I keep telling myself that I am not a miracle of physics, as long as I eat at a deficit, the weight WILL come off...eventually. And it does.
ETA: I highly recommend changing your carb/protein percentages. I think MFP has it's protein levels low. I raised mine to 30% and lowered my carbs to 40% (fat has the remaining 30%) and have had a LOT more success with my weight loss. Try it!0 -
The single most important secret to losing weight is to be accurate in your calculations.
Is your activity level correct? Ie: Do you choose "active" when you're actually "sedentary"?
Is your goal reasonable? If you only need to lose 10-20 pounds, a 2 pound a week goals is probably not going to work. The less you have to lose, the smaller your weekly loss goal needs to be. Your body is much less inclined to let go of your fat when you have a lot less of it stored.
Is your food logging precise? Are you measuring and weighing and logging every bite? Those handful of fries off your son's plate? The spoonful of ice cream when you dish up your husband's bowl? The olive oil you cooked with? The cream in your coffee? Do you ever cheat yourself by choosing a food from the database that's similar to what you ate, but is the lowest calorie thing there? (ie: chocolate cake can range from 125kc to 1000kc for a slice - are you choosing the lowest one?)
Are you sure of your exercise burns? Are you really burning 500 calories during a session? Or is it possible that you're only burning 300? Maybe your "fast walk" isn't so fast after all? If you are eating back your exercise calories and aren't actually burning as much as you're eating, you may very well be eliminating your deficit (or part of it).
And then, stick to it for at least a month, six weeks is better, before you give up and try something else. I keep telling myself that I am not a miracle of physics, as long as I eat at a deficit, the weight WILL come off...eventually. And it does.
I ♥ this advice. There were so many things in it for me to think about how I can fine tune my healthy lifestyle change. (That's code for "I refuse to use the word 'diet' in reference to this journey I'm on.")0 -
The single most important secret to losing weight is to be accurate in your calculations.
Is your activity level correct? Ie: Do you choose "active" when you're actually "sedentary"?
Is your goal reasonable? If you only need to lose 10-20 pounds, a 2 pound a week goals is probably not going to work. The less you have to lose, the smaller your weekly loss goal needs to be. Your body is much less inclined to let go of your fat when you have a lot less of it stored.
Is your food logging precise? Are you measuring and weighing and logging every bite? Those handful of fries off your son's plate? The spoonful of ice cream when you dish up your husband's bowl? The olive oil you cooked with? The cream in your coffee? Do you ever cheat yourself by choosing a food from the database that's similar to what you ate, but is the lowest calorie thing there? (ie: chocolate cake can range from 125kc to 1000kc for a slice - are you choosing the lowest one?)
Are you sure of your exercise burns? Are you really burning 500 calories during a session? Or is it possible that you're only burning 300? Maybe your "fast walk" isn't so fast after all? If you are eating back your exercise calories and aren't actually burning as much as you're eating, you may very well be eliminating your deficit (or part of it).
And then, stick to it for at least a month, six weeks is better, before you give up and try something else. I keep telling myself that I am not a miracle of physics, as long as I eat at a deficit, the weight WILL come off...eventually. And it does.
ETA: I highly recommend changing your carb/protein percentages. I think MFP has it's protein levels low. I raised mine to 30% and lowered my carbs to 40% (fat has the remaining 30%) and have had a LOT more success with my weight loss. Try it!
Listen to the woman.
She's one smart chica0 -
Let me preface my post by telling you that I'm not going to be of any help- I'm having the same problem! It seems like no matter what I change, it doesn't make any difference. So at least you might feel a little better knowing it's not just you! Hopefully you'll get some good suggestions that I can try too. Keep at it though, don't lose your motivation!!
Yep, I know I'm not the only one; strength in numbers? lol!0 -
Perhaps you're not doing your experiments for a long enough amount of time??? If you've tried all those different options in just the last month, you might just need to pick a way to do things and do it for a MONTH and then if that doesn't work, switch.
Definitely could be; I'm an impatient person.
I will try my best to stick with what I'm doing now for 1 month and see what happens. Thanks!0 -
You are eating a lot of bread, potaoes, and pastas, which adds up to many carbs at the end of the day. Try eating more clean foods like veggies, fruits , nuts, fats. and protein. That should help:)
I guess as I get older that is something I have to change! Will get going on that and see what happens. Thanks.0 -
The single most important secret to losing weight is to be accurate in your calculations.
Is your activity level correct? Ie: Do you choose "active" when you're actually "sedentary"?
Is your goal reasonable? If you only need to lose 10-20 pounds, a 2 pound a week goals is probably not going to work. The less you have to lose, the smaller your weekly loss goal needs to be. Your body is much less inclined to let go of your fat when you have a lot less of it stored.
Is your food logging precise? Are you measuring and weighing and logging every bite? Those handful of fries off your son's plate? The spoonful of ice cream when you dish up your husband's bowl? The olive oil you cooked with? The cream in your coffee? Do you ever cheat yourself by choosing a food from the database that's similar to what you ate, but is the lowest calorie thing there? (ie: chocolate cake can range from 125kc to 1000kc for a slice - are you choosing the lowest one?)
Are you sure of your exercise burns? Are you really burning 500 calories during a session? Or is it possible that you're only burning 300? Maybe your "fast walk" isn't so fast after all? If you are eating back your exercise calories and aren't actually burning as much as you're eating, you may very well be eliminating your deficit (or part of it).
And then, stick to it for at least a month, six weeks is better, before you give up and try something else. I keep telling myself that I am not a miracle of physics, as long as I eat at a deficit, the weight WILL come off...eventually. And it does.
ETA: I highly recommend changing your carb/protein percentages. I think MFP has it's protein levels low. I raised mine to 30% and lowered my carbs to 40% (fat has the remaining 30%) and have had a LOT more success with my weight loss. Try it!
All good thoughts. My exercise burns should be correct as I wear a HR monitor and I walk pretty fast. I'm a sedentary person - sit at a computer all day, so I know that's correct. I have a lot of "food for thought" here and I'll take it all into consideration and make some changes. Fruits and veggies I really need to add more. I'm an ex-WW person and veggies were "free" so they never had to be counted. I have a salad every night, that's my "quick calories" or if I want to make my net equal my calories then I add those in, which isn't right. I need to do a lot better there. Thanks!0 -
[/quote]
Listen to the woman.
She's one smart chica
[/quote]
Thanks. I will!0 -
Eat back exercise calories, don't eat them back, increase my daily calories, only eat what MFP gives me. ARRGGHH! I have gained and lost the same 1.5 to 2 pounds for at least a month. I don't want to lose all the weight at once, settle for 1/2 to 1 pound a week, that's all. Measuring - yep, done that and there's very little change. I just need to vent. I know I'm eating healthier, with a few slip ups here and there, and I'm exercising almost every day, with rest when I need it or time doesn't allow me that day. I will keep at it though. I have a goal to lose 20 pounds by the end of the year; that's 5 months to lose 20 pounds, which is doable! Any other advice? I will make my diary available for public view.
Thanks.
Laura0
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