Frustrated with eating 1200 a day and not losing weight

My weight has gone up this week and I am frustrated and can't figure out why.

2/4/2019 starting weight: 145.8 lbs

3/26/2019: 131.2 lbs

4/1/2019: 131.6 lbs

I’m eating the same foods as before in the same quantities so no idea what the deal is. I’m feeling really frustrated and unmotivated. I’m also practicing IF of 16:8.

Sorry guys, just needed to rant and get some feedback from you all. I’ve even stepped up my waking game this last week (not that I expect walking to burn a ton of calories) but my usual step count is 5,000ish and now I’m averaging around 8,000 a day. I’ve also been doing a different nightly yoga routine just to mix things up a little bit and engage different muscle groups.

Adding food log link for reference - https://imgur.com/a/C5TjdgL

I ate various amounts throughout the week, but a 7 day span equals to roughly 1,289 calories a day- so how is it possible that I’ve gone up a half pound since last week?
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Replies

  • sngresak
    sngresak Posts: 12 Member
    apullum wrote: »
    First: are you weighing all of your food using a food scale?

    Second: less than half a pound increase on the scale in one week may or may not be meaningful, as it's well within normal weight fluctuation. Your increased exercise alone likely contributed to extra water weight.

    Third: at 131 pounds, you likely don't have much weight to lose and therefore should not expect more than a half pound per week loss.


    Yes, I weigh everything down to the gram on my food scale. I don't eyeball anything and for beverages I drink water or unsweetened iced tea.
  • sngresak
    sngresak Posts: 12 Member
    RaulWells wrote: »
    Hi sngresak, hate to hear your frustration. The human body is an incredible piece of machinery. If you don't eat enough, your body will go into self protection mode and will hold on to your weight. Do you know how much you were eating before you started cutting foods out? Also, are you just walking and doing yoga? What is your goal?

    Before I started on 1200 a day, I wasn't tracking my food intake at all because I was pregnant/had recently given birth and literally did not care lol.

    I just had my second baby on 1/1/2019 so I was just kinda in "survival" mode eating whatever was quick or convenient until I decided to dedicate time to my health on 2/4/2019 which is when I started to track my eating. Just as of March is when I also incorporated walking more and nightly yoga routines. I otherwise don't exercise or go to the gym, with a 3 month old and 1.3 year old I just can't manage to find the time or resources to do it yet.
  • JustinAnimal
    JustinAnimal Posts: 1,335 Member
    In the recent past, I've weighed myself in the morning and afternoon and had close to a 10 pound discrepancy. I went from 233 to 224 in one day. I did a lot of sweating and flushing water, and I'm not sure what else dictates daily weight fluctuations.

    Anyway, other people's advice on here is great. Don't weigh yourself so often, or don't take it so hard when things don't change all that much. This is a slow process that likes when you are patient and consistent.
  • sngresak
    sngresak Posts: 12 Member
    NovusDies wrote: »
    RaulWells wrote: »
    Hi sngresak, hate to hear your frustration. The human body is an incredible piece of machinery. If you don't eat enough, your body will go into self protection mode and will hold on to your weight. Do you know how much you were eating before you started cutting foods out? Also, are you just walking and doing yoga? What is your goal?

    Hi and welcome to MFP. You will notice at the bottom of your post that you will start accumulating many "woo" votes (none from me). This is because you have posted a myth that is scientifically impossible. Don't feel bad. Many people, myself included, have believed things that have turned out not to be true and it has hampered us in our weight loss.

    Our bodies run on energy and so there is no way it can just absolutely refuse to let go of energy stores when we are in a calorie deficit. What is actually happening in the OP's case can easily be explained by this:

    http://physiqonomics.com/the-weird-and-highly-annoying-world-of-scale-weight-and-fluctuations/

    Thank you, this is a very helpful breakdown!
  • apullum
    apullum Posts: 4,838 Member
    In the recent past, I've weighed myself in the morning and afternoon and had close to a 10 pound discrepancy. I went from 233 to 224 in one day. I did a lot of sweating and flushing water, and I'm not sure what else dictates daily weight fluctuations.

    Anyway, other people's advice on here is great. Don't weigh yourself so often, or don't take it so hard when things don't change all that much. This is a slow process that likes when you are patient and consistent.

    OP appears to be only weighing once per week, or else did not post all of their data. Frequency of weighing is a personal preference that does not affect weight loss, but many people find that weighing daily and using a trend weight app like Libra or Happy Scale helps them understand normal weight fluctuations that OP seems to be experiencing.
  • sngresak
    sngresak Posts: 12 Member
    sngresak wrote: »
    spiffy90 wrote: »
    If you weigh yourself once a week its not very reliable data. Either don't get bothered by it or weigh yourself daily in the morning and calculate a weekly average. Half a pound is very much in the ballpark of acceptable margin of error due to water retention. Also there is no way of knowing if you are indeed eating 1200kcals or more since we cant actually see anything in your diary.

    I'm not eating a strict 1200 each day, some days are 1600 and others are 1000. I'd read that it's good to mix up the calorie amount you eat throughout the week so your body doesn't get "used" to what you're doing.

    What I meant was over the course of the past 7 days, my caloric total was 9,023...or roughly equaling 1,289 calories a day.

    Your body doesn't need to avoid getting "used" to a certain amount of calories in that way. If you find it easier to meet your goal mixing it up, then that's fine. But no reason to do it otherwise.

    If you are eating a different amount each day, that can add a bit more unpredictability into what you will weigh on each individual day (a higher calorie day will leave you with more food in your body overall and may have more sodium or carbohydrates than other days). So your amount of temporary water weight may be fluctuating more than if you ate the same amount each day. This is another reason why weighing just once a week may not give you the best possible picture of how you're progressing.

    Yes, this is a good point. Yesterday I ate at an all time high for the week at a little over 1700 since hubby and I actually got a sitter and went out for a nice date day lunch so I guess it would make sense that as of this morning the number may be a little skewed. I find it challenging to weight myself less than once a week. I want to obsess and check every single day and it feels like waiting for a good test score when I finally weigh myself for the week and the number is higher than I'd expect for it to be.
  • PAV8888
    PAV8888 Posts: 14,206 Member
    edited April 2019
    As several people mentioned in various posts, using a weight trend application or web site and concentrating on the trend as opposed to individual weight ins would be helpful in this and similar situations.

    When using such applications providing more data (daily) is probably better for the purpose of establishing an accurate trend; however, our mental comfort is more important than anything else so if daily is too much... it is too much!

    Many users do find, once they "force" themselves to weigh daily and understand how and WHY their weight fluctuates, that they eventually get desensitized to "adverse" fluctuations that are explainable based on past observations.

    The physiqonomics article referenced above does cover most of the reasons weight fluctuates and is a very good summary of the whole issue. http://physiqonomics.com/the-weird-and-highly-annoying-world-of-scale-weight-and-fluctuations/