How do you stay motivated when you don't see any difference in your body and the scale wont budge!?

I started at 163 last year, got down to 152 and stayed there for a few months, I started getting back on track end of March and as of three weeks ago, I am 140.8 lbs and now it wont budge.

This, and the fact that I am not seeing any difference measurement-wise is making me crazy! I stick to my calories of 1200 per day and I walk for a minimum of one hour a day. I also do body weight exercises 3 times per week. I have done research and have learned that I could be losing weight and gaining muscle at the same time, but it is such a mental mind *kitten* and very discouraging.

My question is, how do you stay motivated when you don't see any difference in your body and the scale isn't moving?
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Replies

  • goatg
    goatg Posts: 1,399 Member
    No difference between 163 & 141? That can’t be right.

    How long have you been idling at 141?
  • Shortgirlrunning
    Shortgirlrunning Posts: 1,020 Member
    edited May 2020
    Find other ways to measure progress beyond the scale. That’s just one measurement of the progress you are making.

    Do you take body measurements? That can help you see the changes in your body even when the scale isn’t going down.

    Also, lots of progress pictures. The changes won’t be dramatic from a few weeks apart but you will see subtle changes.

    And set fitness goals to work toward that have nothing to do with weight. I run so usually my fitness goals are pace or distance related. Though currently it’s being able to run up an entire hill that’s on my route.

    Giving yourself multiple ways to measure progress and goals other than weight loss help keep you motivated when you don’t see to be making progress in one area. And if you aren’t making progress by any of the measurements you use then it may be time to switch things up and figure out what isn’t working.

    Oh and I’m going through a bit of a plateau myself recently and one thing I keep reminding myself is that if I don’t keep trying I definitely am not going to get the results I want. Pushing through even when the scale isn’t doing what I want is the only way I’m going to get it to go down eventually.
  • leelee_lani
    leelee_lani Posts: 25 Member
    harper16 wrote: »
    I spent 7 weeks at 210 it was frustrating to not see the scale change, so I understand where you are coming from. But, I stayed the course and broke through to 209 and now down to 207. Reminding myself that weight loss isn't linear, and slow and steady is the best approach helps keep me motivated. Along with wanting to be healthy for my daughter.

    Keep the focus and you'll see results.

    I’m stuck at 208. I too need to remember my biggest motivation is to be healthier for more daughter. Thanks for the reminder. I too have been discouraged lately with the scale and with my food choices recently.
  • libertygurl
    libertygurl Posts: 37 Member
    I actually weigh daily, and then take my average daily weight for the week, and compare that week to week. It quiets down the natural noise in measuring daily, and I find that more motivating. Sometimes I won't see much of a shift over two weeks of doing all the right things, but over the month, if I stay the course, I eventually see the results. Best advice is stay the course.
  • Alexziz
    Alexziz Posts: 12 Member
    I do this too. My boyfriend got me a withings scale and it’s amazing it averages the weeks or months for you and tells you muscle mass, bmi, water weight - all sorts. I find I plateau for a while then loose - be as consistent as you can with exercise and eating right and don’t be too hard on yourself 😊
  • Kupla71
    Kupla71 Posts: 1,106 Member
    I’ve more or less remained the same weight for months. When I lose motivation I remind myself that what I’m doing is preventing me from gaining weight, so to not give up. I have room to tweak my diet and I could get more exercise but you seem to be keeping to your calorie goal and exercising. I would just keep at it. You’ve lost a good chunk of weight. It might be harder now that you have less weight to lose.
  • age_is_just_a_number
    age_is_just_a_number Posts: 630 Member
    Celebrate 20 pounds lost! That deserves a big congratulations.
    Read the MFP article on overcoming a plateau.
    I suggest revisiting your macros. It is not enough to eat 1200 calories; those calories have to made up of the right proportions of fat, protein and carbs for you.
    I suggest increasing/changing your exercise. Your body gets used to the exercise you do. When you change things your body has to react and adapt to that.
    Take care
  • TrueGrit732
    TrueGrit732 Posts: 52 Member
    I feel u on that. I don't see gains often either, but I think of what would happen if I were to STOP! Instead of no gains, I'd see weight gains.
  • nichaelkelly1
    nichaelkelly1 Posts: 13 Member
    goatg wrote: »
    No difference between 163 & 141? That can’t be right.

    How long have you been idling at 141?


    Thanks for your insight, I have been idling at 141 for about 4 weeks now..
  • nichaelkelly1
    nichaelkelly1 Posts: 13 Member
    harper16 wrote: »
    I spent 7 weeks at 210 it was frustrating to not see the scale change, so I understand where you are coming from. But, I stayed the course and broke through to 209 and now down to 207. Reminding myself that weight loss isn't linear, and slow and steady is the best approach helps keep me motivated. Along with wanting to be healthy for my daughter.

    Keep the focus and you'll see results.


    Thank you for your insight, this is so inspiring! You are right, weight loss isn't linear. I will stay the course and hope everything works out. I swear the hardest part of a weightloss journey is the mental aspect. Thank you! :smile:
  • nichaelkelly1
    nichaelkelly1 Posts: 13 Member
    rainbow198 wrote: »
    I understand how frustrating that can be.

    When I was losing weight, I found when I focused more on improving my fitness (and of course being aware of my calorie intake) the weight and inches eventually came off.

    Things like walking a mile faster, improving my stamina to power walk 3+ miles at one time without stopping, working on my push-ups from doing them on the wall, to on my knees to on my toes, lifting heavier weights etc. really took my mind off of the process of losing weight and the ups and downs of the scale.

    Also noticing NSV's really helped. I might not have lost weight on the scale or inches, but I noticed my clothes getting a little bigger, my going down a notch on my belt, my ring getting looser or my double chin getting smaller. So I knew progress was being made so that kept me motivated.

    You just have to keep going and work at it everyday. Lots of hard work and patience needed, but it's so worth it.

    Good luck


    Thank you for your insight. I have started a walking program since running is too painful for me. It is inspiring that you also walk. I am going to try walking an extra mile and move from wall push ups (Chloe ting's 10 min arm workout) and challenge myself to a regular push ups like yourself and focus on leveling up fitness wise. Thank you!
  • MidlifeCrisisFitness
    MidlifeCrisisFitness Posts: 1,106 Member
    Don't be discouraged look how far you've already come!

    Learn some new exercises and research food more.

    A new strength training movement can change your focus. Also new cardio is fun and can help increase your daily caloric deficit. Try swimming or jump rope.

    Are you getting enough fiber, protein, too much or to little carb? Looking what you eat can maybe uncover something.

    Also perhaps a fast....

  • nichaelkelly1
    nichaelkelly1 Posts: 13 Member
    Find other ways to measure progress beyond the scale. That’s just one measurement of the progress you are making.

    Do you take body measurements? That can help you see the changes in your body even when the scale isn’t going down.

    Also, lots of progress pictures. The changes won’t be dramatic from a few weeks apart but you will see subtle changes.

    And set fitness goals to work toward that have nothing to do with weight. I run so usually my fitness goals are pace or distance related. Though currently it’s being able to run up an entire hill that’s on my route.

    Giving yourself multiple ways to measure progress and goals other than weight loss help keep you motivated when you don’t see to be making progress in one area. And if you aren’t making progress by any of the measurements you use then it may be time to switch things up and figure out what isn’t working.

    Oh and I’m going through a bit of a plateau myself recently and one thing I keep reminding myself is that if I don’t keep trying I definitely am not going to get the results I want. Pushing through even when the scale isn’t doing what I want is the only way I’m going to get it to go down eventually.


    Thank you for your insight! Omg you are all so smart. So far i'm learning to focus on fitness, which you have also mentioned here. Yes, i take body measurements and it has definitely gone down but it drives me crazy because i become obsessed when it comes to my weekly weigh in. It is a great idea to focus on fitness and not so much my body because it becomes discouraging. Im excited to get over this plateau. 15 more to go!

    During your plateau, do you lower calorie intake or do you just keep going with what you are doing? A part of me thinks i should lower my calories but i feel like anything lower than 1200 is a little crazy. Thank you!
  • nichaelkelly1
    nichaelkelly1 Posts: 13 Member
    I actually weigh daily, and then take my average daily weight for the week, and compare that week to week. It quiets down the natural noise in measuring daily, and I find that more motivating. Sometimes I won't see much of a shift over two weeks of doing all the right things, but over the month, if I stay the course, I eventually see the results. Best advice is stay the course.

    This is a great idea! I will add this to the list of things to do. Yes, measuring daily can be so frustrating. Thank you so much!
  • nichaelkelly1
    nichaelkelly1 Posts: 13 Member
    Alexziz wrote: »
    I do this too. My boyfriend got me a withings scale and it’s amazing it averages the weeks or months for you and tells you muscle mass, bmi, water weight - all sorts. I find I plateau for a while then loose - be as consistent as you can with exercise and eating right and don’t be too hard on yourself 😊

    Thank you so much. Im going to have to drop hints to my bf about getting one of those scales cause they are a pretty penny lol. Thank you so much, especially about being too hard on myself. As long as I keep going I should stay positive.Thank you!
  • nichaelkelly1
    nichaelkelly1 Posts: 13 Member
    Kupla71 wrote: »
    I’ve more or less remained the same weight for months. When I lose motivation I remind myself that what I’m doing is preventing me from gaining weight, so to not give up. I have room to tweak my diet and I could get more exercise but you seem to be keeping to your calorie goal and exercising. I would just keep at it. You’ve lost a good chunk of weight. It might be harder now that you have less weight to lose.

    Thank you so much. This is encouraging, I will keep going. Thank you :smile:
  • nichaelkelly1
    nichaelkelly1 Posts: 13 Member
    Celebrate 20 pounds lost! That deserves a big congratulations.
    Read the MFP article on overcoming a plateau.
    I suggest revisiting your macros. It is not enough to eat 1200 calories; those calories have to made up of the right proportions of fat, protein and carbs for you.
    I suggest increasing/changing your exercise. Your body gets used to the exercise you do. When you change things your body has to react and adapt to that.
    Take care

    Thank you for your insight. Macros are a whole other question for me. I started off confused about macros but i keep hearing that it is all about CICO. I did a few online calculators for daily calories and I came up with an average of 1285. I figured if I do 1200, if i go over it wont be such a big deal. Anyway it was successful initially, it is just now that i am getting closer to my goal that i am wondering if i should up the calorie intake and if it would hinder my progress overall. Sometimes it get so confusing. Well, off to you tube I go to watch more fledge fitness & Tammy hembrow videos on macros! Thank you!
  • nichaelkelly1
    nichaelkelly1 Posts: 13 Member
    Celebrate 20 pounds lost! That deserves a big congratulations.
    Read the MFP article on overcoming a plateau.
    I suggest revisiting your macros. It is not enough to eat 1200 calories; those calories have to made up of the right proportions of fat, protein and carbs for you.
    I suggest increasing/changing your exercise. Your body gets used to the exercise you do. When you change things your body has to react and adapt to that.
    Take care

    ...and thank you for the congratulations. Sometimes I forget to tell myself good job lol so focused on where I haven't gotten yet that I forget to think of how far I have already come lol