How to lose weight when your body is comfortable?
ash1864
Posts: 24 Member
I am female, 5 feet 8, aged 25, and weigh 11st 2lbs.
For my height and weight, I'm a healthy weight with healthy BMI but I don't feel great at the moment and would really love to shift about a stone. I've been eating healthy for some years now and lost around 2 and a half stone from 2014-2016. I don't lose weight quickly, which is fine, but I do seem to gain and lose the same 7lbs quite a lot.
I exercise between 3-5 times per week depending on my schedule. I do zumba, hiit classes, and the odd weight class if I feel like it. I eat healthily, lots of smoothies, salads, fruit, veg, lean protein - but I do have the occasional treat on weekends. I don't restrict myself but eat a generally very healthy diet. I usually eat between 1300-1500 calories per day.
My body is really comfortable at this weight and just doesn't like to budge. I have been 10st 7lbs in the past but I was not eating enough and had cut down my calories considerably. I do get hungry very quickly after eating (probably an hour or two after a large meal) which I find irritating even though I'm eating enough.
If anyone has any tips or ideas for kick starting the weightloss that would be great - I can change my diet quite easily, but I don't like following fad diets or programmes or taking anything unnatural.
Thank you!
For my height and weight, I'm a healthy weight with healthy BMI but I don't feel great at the moment and would really love to shift about a stone. I've been eating healthy for some years now and lost around 2 and a half stone from 2014-2016. I don't lose weight quickly, which is fine, but I do seem to gain and lose the same 7lbs quite a lot.
I exercise between 3-5 times per week depending on my schedule. I do zumba, hiit classes, and the odd weight class if I feel like it. I eat healthily, lots of smoothies, salads, fruit, veg, lean protein - but I do have the occasional treat on weekends. I don't restrict myself but eat a generally very healthy diet. I usually eat between 1300-1500 calories per day.
My body is really comfortable at this weight and just doesn't like to budge. I have been 10st 7lbs in the past but I was not eating enough and had cut down my calories considerably. I do get hungry very quickly after eating (probably an hour or two after a large meal) which I find irritating even though I'm eating enough.
If anyone has any tips or ideas for kick starting the weightloss that would be great - I can change my diet quite easily, but I don't like following fad diets or programmes or taking anything unnatural.
Thank you!
0
Replies
-
if you are consistently eating only 1300-1500 cals per day then you would be losing weight given your stats.
do you weigh your food?8 -
Log everything as accurately as possible. You have little to lose, which means you need a small deficit (about half a pound a week). Because of that, you need to ensure your diary is on point because you have little room for error. If you don’t have one yet, I would recommend getting a food scale to weigh your solids on and make sure you aren’t accidentally overeating.4
-
Thank you! I do weigh pasta and rice - but that's about it really.
What do you suggest weighing - not all food but most?2 -
-
Thank you! I do weigh pasta and rice - but that's about it really.
What do you suggest weighing - not all food but most?
all food AND drinks (those that are not actually - calorie - which is mostly just plain water). anything that goes in your mouth (the general we) are very bad at assessing weight of the food we eat and underestimate calories. It is the only way to know if you are actually hitting your calorie goal or not.
it can also recommend macros to ensure you have a balanced diet (protein is important).
0 -
The whole concept of your body having a set weight that it tries to revert to has pretty much been debunked. If you aren’t losing weight after dieting for a while (4-6 weeks) something is wrong with your CICO calculation.8
-
My weight seems to have stuck between 103 and 105lbs, that is with just eating healthy so I know what you mean, I sometimes have a treat but it makes no difference.10
-
It's not your body that is comfortable, it's you that's comfortable with your lifestyle. If you want something to change, you have to change something - being accurately accountable about everything that goes in your mouth is a great start, and I second/third/fourth all the other suggestions to do that by weighing solids/semi-solids and measuring all liquids that you ingest.
You may also find that incorporating more weight training, following a progressive lifting program, may help you get a better physique.11 -
My weight seems to have stuck between 103 and 105lbs, that is with just eating healthy so I know what you mean, I sometimes have a treat but it makes no difference.
You can over-consume 'healthy' foods just as easily as 'unhealthy' ones. Weight management isn't about what you eat, but how much of it you eat.11 -
Thank you - everyone is very insightful. Weighing my food and logging drinks is something I'll definitely start doing. My main worry is I'll get hungry - no one likes being hungry! I do get hungry even an hour or so after my evening meals. I drink about 3 litres of water per day, so it's definitely not that. Do you think it could be the amount of sugar in some meals? For example I often make stir fry veg with chicken and noodles - an hour after my stomach starts gurgling!0
-
Thank you - everyone is very insightful. Weighing my food and logging drinks is something I'll definitely start doing. My main worry is I'll get hungry - no one likes being hungry! I do get hungry even an hour or so after my evening meals. I drink about 3 litres of water per day, so it's definitely not that. Do you think it could be the amount of sugar in some meals? For example I often make stir fry veg with chicken and noodles - an hour after my stomach starts gurgling!
Which is not necessarily a sign of hunger but more the physical fact of the food and liquids (and any air swallowed along with it) being processed through your stomach and intestines.
Habit probably had you feeding the rumbling and it's now hard to get used to it. Perhaps up your calories a smidgen and add a post dinner snack if you really feel you need it.
Also, how fast do you eat your food? The faster your eat it, the more air you swallow along with it, which might also lead to more air gurgling around in your intestines.3 -
I know I have a feeling it's not hunger at all - although it feels like it!
I am quite a fast eater, I always have been so that might also be something to watch.
It's interesting getting other people's perspectives as you become so accustomed to doing things your own way you don't see where you might be going wrong!2 -
Thank you - everyone is very insightful. Weighing my food and logging drinks is something I'll definitely start doing. My main worry is I'll get hungry - no one likes being hungry! I do get hungry even an hour or so after my evening meals. I drink about 3 litres of water per day, so it's definitely not that. Do you think it could be the amount of sugar in some meals? For example I often make stir fry veg with chicken and noodles - an hour after my stomach starts gurgling!
once you have your calories sorted and are logging accurately, look at your macros, getting enough fat, protein and fibre will help with keeping you full.5 -
I'm in a similar situation. It is so tough getting those last few pounds off. I weigh and measure everything, and I count everything that goes in my mouth. Mini Hershey's bar 45 calories. it seems like nothing, but it is all calories.2
-
Thank you - everyone is very insightful. Weighing my food and logging drinks is something I'll definitely start doing. My main worry is I'll get hungry - no one likes being hungry! I do get hungry even an hour or so after my evening meals. I drink about 3 litres of water per day, so it's definitely not that. Do you think it could be the amount of sugar in some meals? For example I often make stir fry veg with chicken and noodles - an hour after my stomach starts gurgling!
Just wanted to comment on this. Personally I find if I eat a large amount of sugar or refined flour I'm hungrier. For example, I've been eating lean cuisine lasagna for lunches for quite some time. It is a measured portion 310 calories but very high in carb. This week I felt like a change so started eating beef barley soup that I made from scratch and loaded the recipe into MFP as I made it. It's 142 calories per serving. I have been less hungry on the soup than I was on the higher calorie lasagna. I think it's because the beef and barley take longer to digest. There are carrots and celery in the soup also providing fiber. While this is a lower calorie meal I find it more satisfying. Might be worth taking a harder look at your macros.6 -
-
Check out this thread, @ash1864
https://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/discussion/10634517/you-dont-use-a-food-scale/p11
Categories
- All Categories
- 1.4M Health, Wellness and Goals
- 393.4K Introduce Yourself
- 43.8K Getting Started
- 260.2K Health and Weight Loss
- 175.9K Food and Nutrition
- 47.4K Recipes
- 232.5K Fitness and Exercise
- 424 Sleep, Mindfulness and Overall Wellness
- 6.5K Goal: Maintaining Weight
- 8.5K 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
- 3.7K MyFitnessPal Information
- 24 News and Announcements
- 1.1K Feature Suggestions and Ideas
- 2.6K MyFitnessPal Tech Support Questions