No change in last 3 months
Christi2705
Posts: 8 Member
I’ve seen zero weight loss in the last 4 months and pretty much zero change in measurements in the last 3.
I’m currently 120-122 (at 5’1”). I workout 6-7 days a week (2 of those days I do an extra hour with a trainer)...at least 30 minutes of cardio and 45 of weights and core work. I’ve tried 1200 and 1400 calorie limits and eat at least my lean mass (90) in protein every day.
My strength had definitely increased but its frustrating that nothing else really seems to be changing.
Any suggestions would be appreciated!
I’m currently 120-122 (at 5’1”). I workout 6-7 days a week (2 of those days I do an extra hour with a trainer)...at least 30 minutes of cardio and 45 of weights and core work. I’ve tried 1200 and 1400 calorie limits and eat at least my lean mass (90) in protein every day.
My strength had definitely increased but its frustrating that nothing else really seems to be changing.
Any suggestions would be appreciated!
0
Replies
-
how are you measuring your calorie intake??6
-
If you're not losing weight, then you're either underestimating how much you eat or overestimating how many calories you burn.
There are a lot of common errors people make when logging; if you open your diary, people can give you some advice on that.9 -
I track everything here and I don’t eat back any of my burned calories. My BMR is right under 1300 so I’ve considered dropping below 1200 for my intake but I’m afraid I’ll lose muscle mass. My Apple Watch really sucks at workout tracking. My HR can be a true 170 and it will show 65. So if anything my workouts are an underestimate anyway.0
-
Do you use a food scale to weigh everything?3
-
Christi2705 wrote: »I track everything here and I don’t eat back any of my burned calories. My BMR is right under 1300 so I’ve considered dropping below 1200 for my intake but I’m afraid I’ll lose muscle mass. My Apple Watch really sucks at workout tracking. My HR can be a true 170 and it will show 65. So if anything my workouts are an underestimate anyway.
Your BMR is what you burn just to exist in a coma. Even if you were sedentary, you would burn 1480ish just to sit around and do nothing. Add in that you're exercising 6-7 days a week and that pushes you up to 1915ish per day. (These numbers based on a guessed age of 25)
How are you tracking your calories? Food scale, cups, guesstimating?3 -
You are at a healthy weight for your height so any final pounds are going to be hard earned. The main thing is to track track track, and use a food scale. All it takes is consuming a few hundred calories more than you think you are, which means you are eating at maintenance and hence why no loss. Tighten up your logging.5
-
Christi2705 wrote: »I track everything here and I don’t eat back any of my burned calories. My BMR is right under 1300 so I’ve considered dropping below 1200 for my intake but I’m afraid I’ll lose muscle mass. My Apple Watch really sucks at workout tracking. My HR can be a true 170 and it will show 65. So if anything my workouts are an underestimate anyway.
HOW are you tracking though? weighing everything you eat on a food scale? guessing portions? measuring cups?8 -
1) it appears you are at a healthy weight. why do you feel like you need to weigh less
2) how do you measure your calories
3) how do you measure your burn
5 -
The lighter you are, the less you burn and the less you can eat to just maintain your weight. It sucks.
I feel your pain. I workout at Orange Theory where your calorie burn is tracked and projected on these monitors and I'm lucky if I pull in 450 calories after a solid hour that includes a half hour of sprint intervals on a treadmill, and there are people who burn 1000 calories or more. My heart is about to leap out of my body, even my fingernails are damp with sweat, and I burned off a caesar salad.2 -
Muscleflex79 wrote: »Christi2705 wrote: »I track everything here and I don’t eat back any of my burned calories. My BMR is right under 1300 so I’ve considered dropping below 1200 for my intake but I’m afraid I’ll lose muscle mass. My Apple Watch really sucks at workout tracking. My HR can be a true 170 and it will show 65. So if anything my workouts are an underestimate anyway.
HOW are you tracking though? weighing everything you eat on a food scale? guessing portions? measuring cups?
The majority of what I eat is packaged so mostly counting and measuring cups. I obviously have to just use my best judgement with portion sizes at some restaurants.1 -
Christi2705 wrote: »Muscleflex79 wrote: »Christi2705 wrote: »I track everything here and I don’t eat back any of my burned calories. My BMR is right under 1300 so I’ve considered dropping below 1200 for my intake but I’m afraid I’ll lose muscle mass. My Apple Watch really sucks at workout tracking. My HR can be a true 170 and it will show 65. So if anything my workouts are an underestimate anyway.
HOW are you tracking though? weighing everything you eat on a food scale? guessing portions? measuring cups?
The majority of what I eat is packaged so mostly counting and measuring cups. I obviously have to just use my best judgement with portion sizes at some restaurants.
And this is why you are not losing weight. Buy a food scale and measure everything you eat. Prepackaged food often weighs more than indicated on the packet. Up to 20% more.10 -
Christi2705 wrote: »Muscleflex79 wrote: »Christi2705 wrote: »I track everything here and I don’t eat back any of my burned calories. My BMR is right under 1300 so I’ve considered dropping below 1200 for my intake but I’m afraid I’ll lose muscle mass. My Apple Watch really sucks at workout tracking. My HR can be a true 170 and it will show 65. So if anything my workouts are an underestimate anyway.
HOW are you tracking though? weighing everything you eat on a food scale? guessing portions? measuring cups?
The majority of what I eat is packaged so mostly counting and measuring cups. I obviously have to just use my best judgement with portion sizes at some restaurants.
That's your answer then! Measuring cups can be way out - there's a great video which shows how off the calories can be, I hope someone will post it. And if you eat out often then it's very likely you are underestimating the calories for those occasions.0 -
You have to weigh everything you can, even prepackaged food. They can be over by 20%. With so little weight to lose you need to accurately track everything that goes into your mouth, by weighing solid foods and using measuring spoons/cups for liquids and make sure you are using accurate entries in the database - there are a LOT of incorrect entries.0
-
-
You’re already in a healthy BMI range for your height. If you’re still unhappy with your appearance, I would strongly recommend strength training and not additional weight loss.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