Doing everything right but not losing

atasteofgrace
atasteofgrace Posts: 15 Member
edited December 19 in Getting Started
Hi there I've been doing this for about 3 weeks and am seeing no loss on the scale. I have been weighing my food on a scale and using a heart rate monitor for exercise calories. I usually eat them back or sometimes save them for a cheat meal. Your thoughts and insights would be great. I exercise 6x a week and log all my food. Thx again.
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Replies

  • TavistockToad
    TavistockToad Posts: 35,719 Member
    Be more patient
  • quiksylver296
    quiksylver296 Posts: 28,439 Member
    Is the exercise new to you? New exercise causes the muscles to retain water to repair themselves. This water often masks any fat loss you've got going on.

    http://physiqonomics.com/the-weird-and-highly-annoying-world-of-scale-weight-and-fluctuations/
  • atasteofgrace
    atasteofgrace Posts: 15 Member
    Be more patient
    So it's normal to not lose any weight in the first 3 weeks?

  • atasteofgrace
    atasteofgrace Posts: 15 Member
    Is the exercise new to you? New exercise causes the muscles to retain water to repair themselves. This water often masks any fat loss you've got going on.

    http://physiqonomics.com/the-weird-and-highly-annoying-world-of-scale-weight-and-fluctuations/
    I had seen that online which is why I wanted to check with everyone here to get opinions. I had taken two months off of exercising completely and about 4 since doing this frequency. Do you think 3 weeks is normal for no weight loss and at some point it will just drop off? Seems crazy but plausible.
  • quiksylver296
    quiksylver296 Posts: 28,439 Member
    Is the exercise new to you? New exercise causes the muscles to retain water to repair themselves. This water often masks any fat loss you've got going on.

    http://physiqonomics.com/the-weird-and-highly-annoying-world-of-scale-weight-and-fluctuations/
    I had seen that online which is why I wanted to check with everyone here to get opinions. I had taken two months off of exercising completely and about 4 since doing this frequency. Do you think 3 weeks is normal for no weight loss and at some point it will just drop off? Seems crazy but plausible.

    If you are certain you are creating a calorie deficit, yes.
  • mbaker566
    mbaker566 Posts: 11,233 Member
    Is the exercise new to you? New exercise causes the muscles to retain water to repair themselves. This water often masks any fat loss you've got going on.

    http://physiqonomics.com/the-weird-and-highly-annoying-world-of-scale-weight-and-fluctuations/
    I had seen that online which is why I wanted to check with everyone here to get opinions. I had taken two months off of exercising completely and about 4 since doing this frequency. Do you think 3 weeks is normal for no weight loss and at some point it will just drop off? Seems crazy but plausible.

    If you are certain you are creating a calorie deficit, yes.

    which may require weighing your food on a food scale, not just cups and weights listed on packaging.
  • RunnerGrl1982
    RunnerGrl1982 Posts: 412 Member
    Is the exercise new to you? New exercise causes the muscles to retain water to repair themselves. This water often masks any fat loss you've got going on.

    http://physiqonomics.com/the-weird-and-highly-annoying-world-of-scale-weight-and-fluctuations/
    I had seen that online which is why I wanted to check with everyone here to get opinions. I had taken two months off of exercising completely and about 4 since doing this frequency. Do you think 3 weeks is normal for no weight loss and at some point it will just drop off? Seems crazy but plausible.

    From my own personal experience of losing the 20lbs I set out to drop, I started seeing results in my clothes first before it ever registered on the scale. I think it was roughly 4-5 weeks of trusting the process before I first saw the scale move, but it did and it will for you as well. Weight loss is a marathon, not a sprint. :smile:
  • atasteofgrace
    atasteofgrace Posts: 15 Member
    mbaker566 wrote: »
    Is the exercise new to you? New exercise causes the muscles to retain water to repair themselves. This water often masks any fat loss you've got going on.

    http://physiqonomics.com/the-weird-and-highly-annoying-world-of-scale-weight-and-fluctuations/
    I had seen that online which is why I wanted to check with everyone here to get opinions. I had taken two months off of exercising completely and about 4 since doing this frequency. Do you think 3 weeks is normal for no weight loss and at some point it will just drop off? Seems crazy but plausible.

    If you are certain you are creating a calorie deficit, yes.

    which may require weighing your food on a food scale, not just cups and weights listed on packaging.
    Yes I have an actual food scale that is what I meant when I said weighing, the other would be measuring.
  • atasteofgrace
    atasteofgrace Posts: 15 Member
    Is the exercise new to you? New exercise causes the muscles to retain water to repair themselves. This water often masks any fat loss you've got going on.

    http://physiqonomics.com/the-weird-and-highly-annoying-world-of-scale-weight-and-fluctuations/
    I had seen that online which is why I wanted to check with everyone here to get opinions. I had taken two months off of exercising completely and about 4 since doing this frequency. Do you think 3 weeks is normal for no weight loss and at some point it will just drop off? Seems crazy but plausible.

    From my own personal experience of losing the 20lbs I set out to drop, I started seeing results in my clothes first before it ever registered on the scale. I think it was roughly 4-5 weeks of trusting the process before I first saw the scale move, but it did and it will for you as well. Weight loss is a marathon, not a sprint. :smile:
    So you were eating at a deficit and exercising? Did the scale drop a lot then to make up for lost time?
  • atasteofgrace
    atasteofgrace Posts: 15 Member
    Is the exercise new to you? New exercise causes the muscles to retain water to repair themselves. This water often masks any fat loss you've got going on.

    http://physiqonomics.com/the-weird-and-highly-annoying-world-of-scale-weight-and-fluctuations/
    I had seen that online which is why I wanted to check with everyone here to get opinions. I had taken two months off of exercising completely and about 4 since doing this frequency. Do you think 3 weeks is normal for no weight loss and at some point it will just drop off? Seems crazy but plausible.

    If you are certain you are creating a calorie deficit, yes.


    Yes I'm certain I am weighing everything and using the heart rate monitor to calculate my burns. Speaking of which I'm going to do the Santa Monica Stairs now. So I hope it is all right and I lose soon! Thanks so much:)
  • atasteofgrace
    atasteofgrace Posts: 15 Member
    Is the exercise new to you? New exercise causes the muscles to retain water to repair themselves. This water often masks any fat loss you've got going on.

    http://physiqonomics.com/the-weird-and-highly-annoying-world-of-scale-weight-and-fluctuations/
    I had seen that online which is why I wanted to check with everyone here to get opinions. I had taken two months off of exercising completely and about 4 since doing this frequency. Do you think 3 weeks is normal for no weight loss and at some point it will just drop off? Seems crazy but plausible.

    If you are certain you are creating a calorie deficit, yes.


    Yes I'm certain I am weighing everything and using the heart rate monitor to calculate my burns. Speaking of which I'm going to do the Santa Monica Stairs now. So I hope it is all right and I lose soon! Thanks so much:)

    Just a thought - are you eating back all of your exercise calories?

    You may try cutting it back to 50% if you don't see any loss soon.
    Okay I tried one week eating them back one week not but even if I eat them back I should still lose 1 lb a week.
  • RunnerGrl1982
    RunnerGrl1982 Posts: 412 Member
    Is the exercise new to you? New exercise causes the muscles to retain water to repair themselves. This water often masks any fat loss you've got going on.

    http://physiqonomics.com/the-weird-and-highly-annoying-world-of-scale-weight-and-fluctuations/
    I had seen that online which is why I wanted to check with everyone here to get opinions. I had taken two months off of exercising completely and about 4 since doing this frequency. Do you think 3 weeks is normal for no weight loss and at some point it will just drop off? Seems crazy but plausible.

    From my own personal experience of losing the 20lbs I set out to drop, I started seeing results in my clothes first before it ever registered on the scale. I think it was roughly 4-5 weeks of trusting the process before I first saw the scale move, but it did and it will for you as well. Weight loss is a marathon, not a sprint. :smile:
    So you were eating at a deficit and exercising? Did the scale drop a lot then to make up for lost time?

    I did eat at deficit and exercise; however my exercise started out 3 days a week and ramped up to 5 eventually a couple months later. I averaged a loss of 3 pounds a month, which ended up being roughly .7lbs per week. My food deficit and exercise were split so I wouldn't have to drop my calorie intake too low and still fuel myself for my running (exercise of choice)

    The scale didn't drop a lot in the beginning honestly for me, but I lost consistently over 6-7 months in order to achieve my goal. It worked out really well for me, but everyone will see results differently.
  • quiksylver296
    quiksylver296 Posts: 28,439 Member
    How much do you have to lose overall?
  • atasteofgrace
    atasteofgrace Posts: 15 Member
    How much do you have to lose overall?
    40-50 lbs.

  • OhMsDiva
    OhMsDiva Posts: 1,073 Member
    Im not a weight loss expert, but I think that if you have not loss anything after 3 weeks then you need to adjust what you are eating.
  • peeweecorrea
    peeweecorrea Posts: 2 Member
    I feel the same. I feel like I’m not losing fast enough. So I just started using this app again to get an idea of my calorie intake so I know whether or not I’m in a deficit.
  • JCoop9
    JCoop9 Posts: 14 Member
    Are you sure your calories are calculated correctly? 1200 seems really low
  • WinoGelato
    WinoGelato Posts: 13,454 Member
    JCoop9 wrote: »
    Are you sure your calories are calculated correctly? 1200 seems really low

    But that wouldn’t explain why OP isn’t losing weight as she thinks she should be.
  • CharlieBeansmomTracey
    CharlieBeansmomTracey Posts: 7,682 Member
    Falklang wrote: »
    I'm not a nutritionist or anything but from all my research (I've done way too much over the years lol) you are eating way too little calories, especially if you are exercising too! I had a look on your diary and you eat very minuscule portions.

    If you are 50-60lbs over weight you should be eating WAAAAYYY more. Leave the exercise and focus on your food. Try to isolate where you are going wrong and go from there. My wife wasn't losing weight, one of the coaches at our local gym suggested adding a protein shake in the mix to up her calories. 3-4 days later...she starts losing weight!

    Try upping your calories to 1.5k a day and see how you do?

    PS. I never calculate my exercise calories into my calorie budget, unless I do a major session and know I've burnt too many lol.

    eating too little calories will not stop you from losing weight. if you eat too little and exercise on top of it you will lose lean mass including muscle and fat. I agree OP is eating too little but that has nothing to do with not being able to lose weight ,if that were the case those whom are anorexic, in starving 3rd workd countries and so on would stop losing weight. it doesnt work that way. when your body doesnt get enough calories to fuel it it will turn to lean mass,muscle(including organs) and fat. it will use whatever it can to produce energy
  • atasteofgrace
    atasteofgrace Posts: 15 Member
    Danp wrote: »
    Is the exercise new to you? New exercise causes the muscles to retain water to repair themselves. This water often masks any fat loss you've got going on.

    http://physiqonomics.com/the-weird-and-highly-annoying-world-of-scale-weight-and-fluctuations/
    I had seen that online which is why I wanted to check with everyone here to get opinions. I had taken two months off of exercising completely and about 4 since doing this frequency. Do you think 3 weeks is normal for no weight loss and at some point it will just drop off? Seems crazy but plausible.

    If you are certain you are creating a calorie deficit, yes.


    Yes I'm certain I am weighing everything and using the heart rate monitor to calculate my burns. Speaking of which I'm going to do the Santa Monica Stairs now. So I hope it is all right and I lose soon! Thanks so much:)

    But you're not. Or more to the point even if you are weighing everything you're not logging the weights so you really have no idea how much your actually eating. Unless you're logging everything and logging it accurately there is no way you can be sure you're eating in a calorie deficit.

    Looking through your diary I notice a few things that really stand out
    - Very few entries are logged by the gram. Everything is 1tbs or 2 slices or 1 cup and even the things that are logged in grams are logged so that the calories or weights are perfectly round numbers. When you're weighing and measuring you'll rarely get exactly 120cal or 200cals. rather you'll see 123cals or 213cals and things will rarely weigh 170g even they'll be 174g. The rounded numbers indicate that you're adjusting the serving to fit your calories.
    - There are entire days practically untracked. There are a few days that consist of nothing but a couple of quick adds and perhaps a snack. There is absolutely no telling how many calories you actually ate that day, if your deficit is small enough then even 1 or 2 day like this can cancel out the other days. You need to track everything you eat, every day. It's the only way to be sure.
    - Some entries just seem unrealistic. A few times for breakfast you've logged 2 slices of bread and that's all. Is that really all you had for breakfast? 2 dry slices of bread, no toppings? no spreads? I also notice that I haven't seen one drink logged. Can you honestly say that not a single drink besides water has passed your lips?

    For the next 3 or 4 weeks be super strict:
    - No quick adds at all.
    - Log everything to the gram. No slices, no serves, no teaspoons, no cups. Be accurate. If it's 142g then log 142g not 140g. Nothing passes your lips unless it's been weighed and logged.
    - Make sure you log everything. If you put a scrape of butter on your bread, weigh it and log it. If you add a bit of ketchup on the side, weigh it and log it. To keep myself honest I created a 0 calorie food item called 'skip meal' which I use to indicate that I have consciously not eaten anything for that meal (I sometimes skip lunch). This way there are no 'blank' meals in my diary and if I see one i know that I've been slack in my logging and my calories aren't accurate.

    Once you have a few weeks of genuine, accurate calorie data you'll be in a much better position.

    G'luck.
    I've actually done this program with success three times. It is IMHO neurotic to weigh milk and what not. A tablespoon is close enough. I measure everything that is reasonable to be measured and weigh the rest. The quick adds are items from the health food store for 90% that have a label on them. The rest is eating out and I find the highest calorie option and use that.
  • atasteofgrace
    atasteofgrace Posts: 15 Member
    One thing in your original post caught my eye and made me wonder... You said something about cheat days. Are you doing this regularly? If you are "cheating" are you counting the calories or are you having a free for all? You can easily erase any progress you have through the week by having a full on cheat day where you eat whatever you want. If you only meant that you eat to maintenance then the deficit for the week should still give you a loss but if you are just eating everything and anything then you may be sabotaging yourself. The other thing that I thought might be a problem is using a HR monitor to calculate calories. Some say they are not accurate. Try cutting back your exercise calories as suggested and you may have better luck. Last but not least is make sure you are logging EVERYTHING. That means a bite here and there, veggies, fruit etc. If none of that works I would see your doctor.


    All of this worked before though. I think it might just be something with exercise and my body retaining water. The cheat day it was only one day in 3 weeks time and I didn't eat my exercise calories back for 4 days to offset it. I found the highest calorie versions of the meal I ordered and went with that.
  • atasteofgrace
    atasteofgrace Posts: 15 Member
    Falklang wrote: »
    I'm not a nutritionist or anything but from all my research (I've done way too much over the years lol) you are eating way too little calories, especially if you are exercising too! I had a look on your diary and you eat very minuscule portions.

    If you are 50-60lbs over weight you should be eating WAAAAYYY more. Leave the exercise and focus on your food. Try to isolate where you are going wrong and go from there. My wife wasn't losing weight, one of the coaches at our local gym suggested adding a protein shake in the mix to up her calories. 3-4 days later...she starts losing weight!

    Try upping your calories to 1.5k a day and see how you do?

    PS. I never calculate my exercise calories into my calorie budget, unless I do a major session and know I've burnt too many lol.


    Thanks yeah I'm going to try and include my exercise calories this week. That will put me between 1600-1700 a day
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