Scale Debate

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I've recently moved and have found the bathroom scale that would work for me is not crazy expensive but more than I'd like to pay right now. Before moving I would weigh myself everyday to get the trend...sometime is helps but most of the time my weight is up and down regardless. When I didn't have a bathroom scale before I did gain A LOT of weight but I also wasn't aware of some of my eating habits and was in a different place with life.

Anyways... Does anyone have luck losing weight without a scale or is it something I should invest in?

Replies

  • amtyrell
    amtyrell Posts: 1,449 Member
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    I am back at mfp because i stoppeed l
    Weighing myself and logging daily and my weight went back up. I know i need to log and to log i need my weight. Daily perhaps not. So if you say go to a gym and weigh at the gym that woild probably be fine. But a scale is under 25 at Amazon and i would invest in one.
  • usmcmp
    usmcmp Posts: 21,220 Member
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    This is entirely personal. Some people don't need a scale and others need to weigh daily. There was one study that showed people who weighed daily naturally adjusted their eating based on the results. I prefer to see the payoff for my efforts, others throw in the towel when the scale shows an increase.

    If a scale helps you find an inexpensive one. You don't need something super fancy. I got mine at Walmart for $20.
  • size102b
    size102b Posts: 1,370 Member
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    If I don’t weigh I gain
    Scales aren’t a liner but they do help most people stay on track

    Lost 86lbs weighing 3-4 times weekly
  • jlhalley7835
    jlhalley7835 Posts: 188 Member
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    I weigh daily, but I have a smart scale that tracks a lot of different metrics. It also syncs it to mfp through my Apple health app. Before I had a smart scale, I had a regular scale and seeing the number move down on a weekly basis kept me motivated
  • DancingMoosie
    DancingMoosie Posts: 8,613 Member
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    I didn't have a good scale at home when I first started, but there was a digital scale at work. So, if there is one available to you, you wouldn't necessarily have to buy your own right away. I do find it a very useful tool for weight management. I (finally) got my own digital scale for only $20. You don't have to get the most expensive one.
  • apullum
    apullum Posts: 4,838 Member
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    What do you mean by "the bathroom scale that would work for me"? For weight management, you don't need anything more than a basic bathroom scale, preferably digital since those are generally easier to read. Amazon has them for under $10.

    It's also worth pointing out that most of us who've been here for a while find a food scale more helpful than a bathroom scale, if you really can buy only one. A food scale will help you ensure that you're in a deficit by weighing all your food. If you're consistently in a deficit, then your weight will go down; a bathroom scale just shows you that result. Amazon also has food scales for under $10.

    tl;dr, if you only have $10, get a food scale; if you have $20, get both.
  • NovusDies
    NovusDies Posts: 8,940 Member
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    You don't lose weight by committee. I would bet you do not want to follow my system and I would probably not do well following yours. This may or may not include weighing habits. Some people absolutely cannot own a scale, for others it is optional, and still others struggle without it.

    I am a numbers person. I have a very detailed spreadsheet that tracks my progress both in scale results and how it compares to my eating. I rely heavily on it for accountability and peace-of-mind. Both my food scale and my bathroom scale are very important pieces of equipment. This only means I need to weight regularly. It doesn't mean anything for the next person trying to lose weight unless they share my particular need for data.
  • liftingbro
    liftingbro Posts: 2,029 Member
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    I started weighing in once a month because when I first started losing weight I only lost like 3lbs in the first month. It was discouraging because I was eating 1800 calories, working out 5 days a week for 1.5 hours, lifting a lot too. I expected more.

    It took me a while to realize my composition was changing, you could see it in the mirror and clothes were loose. My BF% did go down by 5% during that time so I knew I was making progress that my weight wasn't showing fully.