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!

What am I doing wrong

rscott1571
rscott1571 Posts: 5 Member
edited December 2024 in Getting Started
I’m well under my daily calories and struggling to lose 2lbs a week! What’s up with that??

Replies

  • cheryldumais
    cheryldumais Posts: 1,907 Member
    Depends on how much you have to lose. Almost everyone comes into MFP wanting to lose 2 lbs a week. Many can't lose that fast because they don't have that much excess weight to lose in the first place. When I started I had 100 pounds to lose. I chose 2 lbs a week naturally and it gave me 1200 calories a day. That's the lowest it gives women and men 1500 is the lowest. So even if I had stuck to that there was no guarantee I would have lost 2 lbs a week unless I had needed 1000 calories a day more to maintain (I didn't). If my maintenance calories are 1700 then I will only lose 1 lb a week no matter what I key in to the system. It will never recommend 700 calories a day for me because that is dangerously low and I wouldn't get the nutrients I need to survive. So your choices are to either exercise more to burn more calories or be satisfied losing a bit slower. I managed to reach goal weight but it took me a bit longer. It was totally worth it.
  • rscott1571
    rscott1571 Posts: 5 Member
    I just don’t eat my exercise calories back, I’m walking on the treadmill for 1 hour everyday. I always hit 10,000 steps a day. This week I only lost 1 pound! It’s disappointing
  • cheryldumais
    cheryldumais Posts: 1,907 Member
    I feel your pain. My average the first year was 1.7/week and the last 20 lbs took me a year to lose! That's less than a half pound a week. But the longer it took me the more I learned which has helped me immensly in my maintenance. Now I know exactly how much I can eat to keep the weight off and I'm accustomed to the lower calories and feel I can do this for life.
  • erickirb
    erickirb Posts: 12,294 Member
    how much weight do you have to lose? really, a goal of losing 2lbs/week is too much for most, unless you have 75+ lbs to lose
  • Ddub2020
    Ddub2020 Posts: 17 Member
    I will be happy it I lose one pound this week.
  • Ddub2020
    Ddub2020 Posts: 17 Member
    Make sure you are counting liquid calories. In the past I failed to do that when trying to lose weight.
  • rscott1571
    rscott1571 Posts: 5 Member
    Thanks to all replies! I need to lose 25-30 lbs. I weight all meals and enter liquid calories. The older I get the harder it seems to be! I was a gym rat in my 30’s and could lose weight in no time, now ..... it’s a struggle!
  • rscott1571
    rscott1571 Posts: 5 Member
    I’m 57 years young
  • erickirb
    erickirb Posts: 12,294 Member
    rscott1571 wrote: »
    Thanks to all replies! I need to lose 25-30 lbs. I weight all meals and enter liquid calories. The older I get the harder it seems to be! I was a gym rat in my 30’s and could lose weight in no time, now ..... it’s a struggle!

    with only that much to lose you should set your weekly goal to lose 1 lb/week
  • snowflake954
    snowflake954 Posts: 8,399 Member
    With 25-30 lbs to lose you should be losing 1/2 lbs per week. You're doing just fine. The last 25 lbs go slowly and you have to be precise with your weighing and logging of food. Good luck.
  • try2again
    try2again Posts: 3,564 Member
    edited April 2019
    rscott1571 wrote: »
    Thanks to all replies! I need to lose 25-30 lbs. I weight all meals and enter liquid calories. The older I get the harder it seems to be! I was a gym rat in my 30’s and could lose weight in no time, now ..... it’s a struggle!

    The impression that it's harder to lose weight as we age is typically the result of unacknowledged changes in our activity level, not an inherent weakness of older age. I used to think that too- I lost weight so easily in my 20s & 30s... what happened? Then I remembered, in my 20s & 30s I was working jobs that probably had me getting 20,000 steps some days, regularly lifting & hauling up to 50 lbs, and at least some of that time, walking or biking to work. Now, at 50, I'm a SAHM that sometimes doesn't hit 5000 steps a day in my small house, in a rural area where most things are not in walking distance. I just never thought of myself as being that active when I was younger because I didn't purposely exercise, it was just my life. But life changes ;)
This discussion has been closed.