How often to weight myself?
nathashasingh90
Posts: 7 Member
How often do I have to weigh myself?
I have been doing a weekly weigh in. But recently the weighing scale shows weight gain. But I feel much toner, and stronger. I don't want to be discouraged. So the question is should I still do a weekly weigh in?
I have been doing a weekly weigh in. But recently the weighing scale shows weight gain. But I feel much toner, and stronger. I don't want to be discouraged. So the question is should I still do a weekly weigh in?
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Replies
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Yes. Just record the number and move on. If you are not overeating and are in a deficit then it could be water retention. If you gain two weeks or more in a row look at your logging and eating pattern. Eat less exercise calories, use a food scale, etc. Not weighing myself was how I put on about 60 lbs. Not saying that would happen to you, but now I know I need to keep track of my weight to know what's going on.1
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I weigh myself every morning and log it.2
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At the end of the day it doesn't matter how often you weigh yourself but that each month on month you are gradually seeing your weight come down.
I'm a daily weigher even in maintenance, the scale fluctuates a lot for all of us and that's normal, my lowest weigh in day is usually a Saturday, my highest a Monday. But overall the trend is I'm maintaining my weight which is what I want so its all good.0 -
This question comes up quite often it seems. It really depends on you and your situation. The more confident you are that you are logging correctly and eating at a deficit the more liberty you can take with your weigh in schedules I think. The exception is probably when/if you are losing .5 a week and you only have 250 calories a day between deficit and maintenance and then you might need to stick to at least weekly.
The popular trends here are daily and weekly but you just decide what is best for you. I, personally, have not weighed for over a month because I do what is best for me.1 -
Maybe you're seeing a bigger number on the scale because you've gained muscle. Muscle weights more than fat, so maybe track your progress by measuring inches lost.6
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Take measurements and use those for comparison. You don't have to weigh in at all, though most of us find it helpful. It's more important that you are weighing and carefully logging your food than yourself.1
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nathashasingh90 wrote: »How often do I have to weigh myself?
I have been doing a weekly weigh in. But recently the weighing scale shows weight gain. But I feel much toner, and stronger. I don't want to be discouraged. So the question is should I still do a weekly weigh in?LyssaRonnell wrote: »Maybe you're seeing a bigger number on the scale because you've gained muscle. Muscle weights more than fat, so maybe track your progress by measuring inches lost.
Unless you're a teenage boy, or you're stacking Test.
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I weigh daily but look at my weekly average weight for progress purposes. Day by day your weight can fluctuate wildly, and if you only measure once a week you risk catching yourself on a high day which can make it seem like you’re not making progress. It’s entirely up to you how often you weigh, but make sure you’re looking at trends/averages over time rather than individual weigh-ins.
To illustrate my point, I’m in a group chat with friends who are all trying to lose weight. We check in every Monday with our weight. Last Monday I posted 12 stone 5.2, and today I posted 11 stone 12.4 (almost a full 7lb loss in a week!!). BUT, my average weight for the first week was 12 stone 3.8, and the past week was 12 stone 1.8 (2 lb loss for the week). Sodium and hormones played havoc with my daily weigh ins and if I’d only weighed on Monday’s I wouldn’t have seen the bigger picture.1 -
You may actually do better weighing daily than weekly. Weight fluctuates and you may have missed a low day, hit a high day.
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Period? Ovulation?
I gain water weight when it's my time of the month... up to 5lbs on the first day of menstruation.1 -
serindipte wrote: »You may actually do better weighing daily than weekly. Weight fluctuates and you may have missed a low day, hit a high day.
Getting in touch with your weekly, daily, and monthly fluctuations can help you calm down if you're prepared to seek understanding of the impact of hydration and feeding and voiding and hormones on your scale weight(which isn't a 1:1 to your BF%)
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I weigh daily because I like the data. I find weekly more discouraging because if you had a bad night the night before, or are going through lady times, or maybe have water weight, or whatever, that sometimes that weekly number can make it feel like you went way off track, when it's really just a normal fluctuation.
When it's daily I find it's easier to see the fluctuations and that your highest highs are lower than they used to be. Rather than just "Oh my god I gained two lbs this week even though I was measuring my damn spices to the gram" it becomes "yesterday I was one and a half lbs lighter so obviously this isn't just fat gained."3
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