We are pleased to announce that as of March 4, 2025, an updated Rich Text Editor has been introduced in the MyFitnessPal Community. To learn more about the changes, please click here. We look forward to sharing this new feature with you!

Water weight?

silacey08
silacey08 Posts: 10 Member
edited December 2024 in Health and Weight Loss
How do you know what is just water weight?

Replies

  • AnnPT77
    AnnPT77 Posts: 35,698 Member
    If you stick to your healthy routine for a month or so, have your calorie goal set at a sensible level, stick to it, and log eating/exercise reasonably accurately, you'll see some little (few pounds) ups and downs on the scale from day to day, and a gradual, steady downward trend over the whole month or so. ("Steady downward trend" means the high weights will get a little lower, the low weights will get a little lower, just generally/overall, not every weigh-in).

    Looking backward, the little ups and downs will have been mostly water weight. The overall downhill trend is mostly fat loss.

    In my weight-trending app, one chunk of my weight loss looked like the graph below. (The connected down-hill-ish line is the trend; the little upright bars connect each daily weight to the trend. You can see that the daily weights bounce all over: That's water fluctuation. The downhill shows that I was losing fat (mostly).)

    79f9phe4s9qg.png[/quote]

    P.S. I accidentally lost weight too fast for a while during the time period shown. Don't do that: It's a Bad Plan. ;)
  • silacey08
    silacey08 Posts: 10 Member
    AnnPT77 wrote: »
    If you stick to your healthy routine for a month or so, have your calorie goal set at a sensible level, stick to it, and log eating/exercise reasonably accurately, you'll see some little (few pounds) ups and downs on the scale from day to day, and a gradual, steady downward trend over the whole month or so. ("Steady downward trend" means the high weights will get a little lower, the low weights will get a little lower, just generally/overall, not every weigh-in).

    Looking backward, the little ups and downs will have been mostly water weight. The overall downhill trend is mostly fat loss.

    In my weight-trending app, one chunk of my weight loss looked like the graph below. (The connected down-hill-ish line is the trend; the little upright bars connect each daily weight to the trend. You can see that the daily weights bounce all over: That's water fluctuation. The downhill shows that I was losing fat (mostly).)

    79f9phe4s9qg.png

    P.S. I accidentally lost weight too fast for a while during the time period shown. Don't do that: It's a Bad Plan. ;)[/quote]

    What app is that?
  • AnnPT77
    AnnPT77 Posts: 35,698 Member
    silacey08 wrote: »
    AnnPT77 wrote: »
    If you stick to your healthy routine for a month or so, have your calorie goal set at a sensible level, stick to it, and log eating/exercise reasonably accurately, you'll see some little (few pounds) ups and downs on the scale from day to day, and a gradual, steady downward trend over the whole month or so. ("Steady downward trend" means the high weights will get a little lower, the low weights will get a little lower, just generally/overall, not every weigh-in).

    Looking backward, the little ups and downs will have been mostly water weight. The overall downhill trend is mostly fat loss.

    In my weight-trending app, one chunk of my weight loss looked like the graph below. (The connected down-hill-ish line is the trend; the little upright bars connect each daily weight to the trend. You can see that the daily weights bounce all over: That's water fluctuation. The downhill shows that I was losing fat (mostly).)

    79f9phe4s9qg.png

    P.S. I accidentally lost weight too fast for a while during the time period shown. Don't do that: It's a Bad Plan. ;)

    What app is that?

    Libra (for Android). There are others, similar: Happy Scale (iOS), Trendweight (need a free Fitbit account, I'm told), Weightgrapher, and more.
This discussion has been closed.