BMR seems like a wild guess to me

jim_pipkin
jim_pipkin Posts: 82 Member
edited July 2019 in Food and Nutrition
At 6-foot-1 and 309lbs, with daily one hour workouts that include 3000 hip abductors, 1000 pelvic lifts, plus weight training...and a warehouse job that keeps me on my feet tossing boxes 6-8 hours every weekday, I should be able to eat 2200 calories a day and lose weight. NOT. If I go over 1600 GROSS calories in a day, I gain weight. After nine months I am down 115 pounds, but my body is seriously fighting back. Last week I needed a 36-hour fast to drop weight, this week it looks like the same. Will I have to live on less than 1600 calories the rest of my life?
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Replies

  • jim_pipkin
    jim_pipkin Posts: 82 Member
    edited August 2019
    mph323 wrote: »
    How are you determining your calories? Do you weigh solid food and measure liquids? Chances are that you are eating more than you think - it seems very unlikely that a 6-foot-1 very active male would gain weight on anything over 1600 calories. I would look at the logging accuracy first.

    I weigh and measure everything - thus my confusion. But also the pace of my weight loss is no doubt a factor, dropping 3lbs a week for 38 weeks is not sustainable, and not what I'm shooting for - but after nine months, even a half pound loss per week requires drastic calorie cuts.

    [MFP mods fixed the quote]
  • jim_pipkin
    jim_pipkin Posts: 82 Member
    edited August 2019
    eta: After 9 months of aggressive dieting you may benefit from a diet break (eating at maintenance for a period of time). Check out this thread - the first couple of pages are most informative.

    My problem is whenever I try "maintenance" levels, my weight shoots up several pounds in a few days. I don't want to lose the ground I've gained, so I stopped doing that.

    [MFP mods fixed the quote]
  • jim_pipkin
    jim_pipkin Posts: 82 Member
    Thanks for all of the solid advice, everyone - a lot of this is simply my own impatience. Once I started getting all of this excess weight off, I wanted it GONE...but it will take more time.
  • jim_pipkin
    jim_pipkin Posts: 82 Member

    YES...and thank you! Excellent resource, I signed up for the regular emails. Much appreciated!
  • corinasue1143
    corinasue1143 Posts: 7,460 Member
    Everyone seems to know all the scientific stuff. I don’t. But I do know this. Every time I severely cut calories, I lose about 10 pounds in a very, very short time. Every time I go back to higher calories after a while on fewer calories, I gain about 10 pounds in a very, very short time. Then my weight levels out.
  • jim_pipkin
    jim_pipkin Posts: 82 Member
    NovusDies wrote: »
    jim_pipkin wrote: »

    Sustainability will not come with overreaction and overcompensation. You have to trust the process and find a lane and stick with it unless/until there is no choice but adapt.

    I know my impatience is my biggest obstacle at this point, TRYING to trust the process.
  • jim_pipkin
    jim_pipkin Posts: 82 Member

    You have all this energy and you have gotten yourself addicted to the progress.



    Exactly. I have to throttle back, keep the workouts going, and increase my calories to a sane level - which means I can expect a bump in the short term, but should start seeing steady progress once my body figures out we're not in a Gulag.