Frustratingly Slow Weight Loss

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Hello. I have been on MFP for years, off and on. Currently, I am almost to 600 days of logging every day. Most of those days, I have logged my complete day. I would guess only 5 or 6 days total that I didn't. Anyway, I started this July of 2017. As of today, Feb of 2019, I have lost 104 pounds. The thing is, I lost 80 in 8 months to start out with. That tells you that in the following 11 months, I have lost 24. OK. I'll take it. But how to I get it going a little faster? I am currently eating 1335 calories a day. I tried cutting back to 1200 and I just couldn't seem to stick to it. This 1335 is working pretty well for me, but man the loss is slow. My doctor wants me to get 100 grams of protein a day and says I will see the loss pick up again if I do that. I find that very difficult. I am always way of the "daily recommended" but hardly ever actually all the way up to 100. Is she right? Is that all I need to do? I do water aerobics at least 3 one hour sessions a week and I'm scheduled for 5 with sometimes doing 2 hours. Life interferes, but I try to make sure it's at least 3 of those days and if I miss, at least one will be the 2 hours. I do little else since I have bad knees. I do haul hay out to my horses, but that's not that much work. When this horrible mud goes away, I want to start riding again and I know that's good exercise. Any ideas to help?
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  • janalo55
    janalo55 Posts: 50 Member
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    Oh. I am at 198.6 pounds with a goal of 160 or so. We'll see when I get there. The clothes that fit me at 200 before do not fit now so I'm not sure if I will need to go lower to reach my desired weight. It's been so long since I was there, I have no reference point.
  • oceangirl99
    oceangirl99 Posts: 161 Member
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    104 lbs is amazing! Congratulations. My non-expert opinion is that you either need to eat fewer calories, or burn more... but you already knew that. Sorry I can't help - I think you are on the right track. My weight loss has also slowed to a snails pace. I wanted to lose 1lb/week and that certainly wasn't happening so now I aim for 0.5 lbs/week. It looks like you are now at just over 0.25/week and as much as losing slowly is frustrating, from what I hear, it is likely to be more sustainable in the long run.
  • janalo55
    janalo55 Posts: 50 Member
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    I guess it does figure out to about a quarter pound a week. It's just that I lose, and then spend 3 or 4 weeks fluctuating up, before I finally get back to that low point and then down just a little and fluctuate up 3 to 4 pounds again for the next 3 or 4 weeks... I don't record those fluctuations because I haven't "cheated" so I don't believe they are real. I do, however, record the losses! LOL! I suppose the same reasoning would be that those are not real, but I take them. And thank you. I am much happier... able to do things I couldn't, etc., but impatient!
  • janalo55
    janalo55 Posts: 50 Member
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    trimi1104 wrote: »
    The more you have to lose the faster it goes. It's supposed to slow down in the process.
    I'm sorry this is not the answer you wanted but your body loses at its own speed. After all it took you one year and a half to lose 104 pounds, I bet it didn't take you just one year and a half to put it on, right? Trust the process and keep going.

    In September of 2007, I was at 172 pounds. By my wedding in December of 2009, I was about 250. I then got up all the way to 303 (that's an estimate because my scale errored out at 300 so I guessed by how soon I could weigh). I had a hysterectomy in 2007 and it took me until April of 2017 to find a doctor who could help me deal with my hormone issues. After getting that handled, we started the weight loss journey in July. The fastest I ever gained was 40 pounds in 4 months, which I did when I was 19 and went from 139 to 179. I figured if I could lose at the weight I gained, I'd be happy. LOL! And I did, to begin with. So I guess I should just be happy... and keep plugging away. Maybe I'll be at goal before I die. I'm going to be 64 in April so I hope that's awhile!
  • MikePTY
    MikePTY Posts: 3,814 Member
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    I would celebrate the success and keep up with the progress, even if it is slower than you would like. It seems like you are losing about half a pound a week (24 pounds in 48 weeks). While I can understand the desire to go faster, that is a reasonable weight of loss.
  • ahoy_m8
    ahoy_m8 Posts: 3,052 Member
    edited February 2019
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    janalo55 wrote: »
    I guess it does figure out to about a quarter pound a week. It's just that I lose, and then spend 3 or 4 weeks fluctuating up, before I finally get back to that low point and then down just a little and fluctuate up 3 to 4 pounds again for the next 3 or 4 weeks... I don't record those fluctuations because I haven't "cheated" so I don't believe they are real. I do, however, record the losses! LOL! I suppose the same reasoning would be that those are not real, but I take them. And thank you. I am much happier... able to do things I couldn't, etc., but impatient!

    OMG.... you are doing FANTASTIC! Give yourself some credit. That fluctuation thing you describe, exact same for me. Really, divining body weight with all the natural healthy fluctuations is the most frustrating, imprecise part of fat loss. It sounds like you have it figured out, so give yourself credit for that, too.

    Have you ever considered a "diet break?" https://bodyrecomposition.com/fat-loss/the-full-diet-break.html/

    ETA: doh! missed same question above.
  • bigbandjohn
    bigbandjohn Posts: 769 Member
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    janalo55 wrote: »
    Hello. I have been on MFP for years, off and on. Currently, I am almost to 600 days of logging every day. Most of those days, I have logged my complete day. I would guess only 5 or 6 days total that I didn't. Anyway, I started this July of 2017. As of today, Feb of 2019, I have lost 104 pounds. The thing is, I lost 80 in 8 months to start out with. That tells you that in the following 11 months, I have lost 24. OK. I'll take it. But how to I get it going a little faster? I am currently eating 1335 calories a day. I tried cutting back to 1200 and I just couldn't seem to stick to it. This 1335 is working pretty well for me, but man the loss is slow. My doctor wants me to get 100 grams of protein a day and says I will see the loss pick up again if I do that. I find that very difficult. I am always way of the "daily recommended" but hardly ever actually all the way up to 100. Is she right? Is that all I need to do? I do water aerobics at least 3 one hour sessions a week and I'm scheduled for 5 with sometimes doing 2 hours. Life interferes, but I try to make sure it's at least 3 of those days and if I miss, at least one will be the 2 hours. I do little else since I have bad knees. I do haul hay out to my horses, but that's not that much work. When this horrible mud goes away, I want to start riding again and I know that's good exercise. Any ideas to help?

    I totally understand what you're going through. I lost over 220 not trying as hard as I could of over the first couple years, and about 70 last year working much harder. 2 months in this year and I've lost only 8 lbs so far and I'm as strict as I've ever been. It's just the nature of getting closer to your goal. You can diet the same, but the "deficit" to maintain gets smaller, and it becomes harder to shed a lot of pounds. I'm not giving up, and you shouldn't either. There is still a minimum you need to meet (which I am) to stay healthy. That balance is what's making it hard.

    I agree with many of the comments with weighing vs measuring. That does help, but you may just be hitting that hard spot. Maybe if something is coming up, you can shift to "maintenance mode" for a couple weeks, give your body a chance to reset, and then start again. I'm not saying it'll make you lose weight faster after, but maybe it'll give your mind a break, as well as give you a chance to see how accurate the caloric intake is for you. BTW, have you been eating 1335 all the time? if so, then your loss will slow down as your maintenance calorie level gets lower as you lose weight, which means your deficit is smaller, hence you lose weight slower.
  • vindidj
    vindidj Posts: 9 Member
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    Oh yes! I too, am struggling with a very hard weight loss plateau that has the very same oscillation you describe. The recommendation for a two week diet break to reset our leptin levels seems to be indicated. But it sounds like we're both very motivated to stay with the program (that's how you have had such great success, right?). I have tried working in a refeed day (eat at maintenance calories) the last two weeks, and have been pushing protein, but those efforts haven't had any effect for me (yet). That doesn't mean they won't for you. Give it a try (supplementing protein is your friend!) Next step is to take the longer break, keeping up carbohydrates, fat low, and stacking protein while consuming a maintenance caloric level. Thankfully, MFP does all the math for us! Oh yes! Another thought I've had is to start using calipers to measure body fat rather than relying on the oh so fickle bathroom scale. Tricky to do by yourself, but maybe someone in the community can point us to a product a person can use on themselves.

    Congratulations on your achievement! Don't give up! Trust the process!
  • LivingtheLeanDream
    LivingtheLeanDream Posts: 13,345 Member
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    janalo55 wrote: »
    I guess it does figure out to about a quarter pound a week. It's just that I lose, and then spend 3 or 4 weeks fluctuating up, before I finally get back to that low point and then down just a little and fluctuate up 3 to 4 pounds again for the next 3 or 4 weeks... I don't record those fluctuations because I haven't "cheated" so I don't believe they are real. I do, however, record the losses! LOL! I suppose the same reasoning would be that those are not real, but I take them. And thank you. I am much happier... able to do things I couldn't, etc., but impatient!

    These fluctuations are pretty normal actually, use a weight trending app to keep you focused and seeing that your overall trend is downwards. Even for me in Maintenence my trend is upwards 3 week's in the month and then swings down, it all averages out. Even when losing I only lost weight every 3 weeks or so - the joys of the monthly cycle eh!

    Great job on massive loss already, just keep going :)
  • LivingtheLeanDream
    LivingtheLeanDream Posts: 13,345 Member
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    No one has asked this yet, are you weighing your food? I know you said logging, but that doesn't necessarily mean weighing it.

    +1
  • janalo55
    janalo55 Posts: 50 Member
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    No one has asked this yet, are you weighing your food? I know you said logging, but that doesn't necessarily mean weighing it.

    +1

    When I can, yes. I use my scale a lot. When we eat out, I estimate. When something is portioned in the package, I don't weigh. But otherwise, I weigh.
  • durhammfp
    durhammfp Posts: 493 Member
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    janalo55 wrote: »
    I guess it does figure out to about a quarter pound a week. It's just that I lose, and then spend 3 or 4 weeks fluctuating up, before I finally get back to that low point and then down just a little and fluctuate up 3 to 4 pounds again for the next 3 or 4 weeks... I don't record those fluctuations because I haven't "cheated" so I don't believe they are real. I do, however, record the losses! LOL! I suppose the same reasoning would be that those are not real, but I take them. And thank you. I am much happier... able to do things I couldn't, etc., but impatient!

    These fluctuations are pretty normal actually, use a weight trending app to keep you focused and seeing that your overall trend is downwards. Even for me in Maintenence my trend is upwards 3 week's in the month and then swings down, it all averages out. Even when losing I only lost weight every 3 weeks or so - the joys of the monthly cycle eh!

    Great job on massive loss already, just keep going :)

    ^^^ This. My weight can vary as much as 2.5 lbs up or down in a day and it has nothing to do with fat loss. It has to do with things like maybe I ate too much salt the night before, or maybe I ate more carbs than usual so my glycogen levels are higher (they store with a *lot* of water)... there are other reasons too. Since I have been tracking my weight every day with a 10-day trending weight line I do not obsess on those fluctuations as much.

    And congrats on your success! You are doing great.

  • noodlesno
    noodlesno Posts: 113 Member
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    For me protein was key, alongside weight training. I upped the protein and also started with heavy lifting and the weight is falling off. I have even had to up the kcals recently from 1500 to 2000kcal to slow it down a bit as I was losing at over 2lbs a week (I am a female 163lbs, 5'6", UK size 10 - I started this 10months ago at 260lbs, UK size 20)

    I don't eat much meat so to get the protein I needed I now put some protein powder in my porridge in the morning and have hard boiled eggs and mayo for snacks.

    Might be worth having a go at upping the proteins and listen to the doctor. Worked for me. Your body can not produce muscle with out protein and the more muscle you have the more kcals you burn.

    Good luck with it all.
  • janalo55
    janalo55 Posts: 50 Member
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    BTW, have you been eating 1335 all the time? if so, then your loss will slow down as your maintenance calorie level gets lower as you lose weight, which means your deficit is smaller, hence you lose weight slower.[/quote]

    No, I have eaten what MFP said to do to lose 2 pounds a week, until that amount went down to 1200 calories. I couldn't stick to that. It was just too restrictive, and I found if I went over, it seemed to be an encouragement to go ahead and go over more, so I went to 1335. I know that seems a strange number, but one day I ate that and decided it worked well so I changed my goal to it. As I recall, I started out at 1650 or something like that.


  • janalo55
    janalo55 Posts: 50 Member
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    durhammfp wrote: »


    ^^^ This. My weight can vary as much as 2.5 lbs up or down in a day and it has nothing to do with fat loss. It has to do with things like maybe I ate too much salt the night before, or maybe I ate more carbs than usual so my glycogen levels are higher (they store with a *lot* of water)... there are other reasons too. Since I have been tracking my weight every day with a 10-day trending weight line I do not obsess on those fluctuations as much.

    And congrats on your success! You are doing great.

    Years ago, I did a low fat diet and I weighed every day. I swear there were days I had a 7 pound fluctuation! I started out on this only weighing once a week. Since I've reached this slow point, though, I have found it hard to stay off the scale, just looking for that one little bit of loss. LOL! So I've seen the fluctuations again, but not to that point. More like 3 or 4, without going off plan.