Help?! 1000-1200 cal. A day plus 1 hr exercise and not loosing an ounce....

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Replies

  • CardinalComb
    CardinalComb Posts: 66 Member
    edited September 2020
    One week isn't enough time to really tell by the scale. Give it some more time and you will start to notice progress. Trust me, the diet is having an effect. With your intake and expenditure numbers you will start to see the fat melt off quickly. I did similar cals on a low carb diet and lost 65lbs in 6 months without much exercise. Started at 235 lbs (37M) now down to 170 and been maintaining weight but improving my body over the last 8 months.

    It's all about nutrition. Nutrition, nutrition, nutrition.

    Edit: I went into your diary after I posted this. You might want to re-think the food you're eating. White bread, french fries, white rice, cereal, jam, pasta have little to no nutrition besides providing you with energy. You had chicken thighs in one but almost equal calories in sweet baby ray's bbq sauce. I also see you are taking a whey protein milkshake? I've never been a fan of getting my nutrition from a powder and choose to go with more natural food like, a cow?

    I give my opinions on nutrition a lot these days but recognize that there are different theories that also work. Weight loss depends on calories in and calories out and there are many ways to do that. What isn't mentioned enough if that your body needs nutrition to perform bodily functions. Nutrient dense food is critical to building a strong, healthy body. The white bread, rice, cereal is all high cal, high carb, low nutrition food and basically a waste of calorie quota. I personally am a big believer in the keto diet which is high fat and low carb. I also believe in the concepts behind Paleo which focuses on eating food in it's most natural form as possible. Fasting is also very important. Your body does important work when you are not eating - look up Autophagy. I only eat one meal a day and don't crave food or feel hungry.

    Some of the foods I eat are any meat besides lean chicken or turkey, trout or salmon, broccolli, ceasar salad with lots of bacon, organic eggs, green beans, bok choy. Lots of green coniferous vegetables. For desert it's usually a really high fat no sugar yogurt (10-11% fat) and berries. I eat lots of nuts usually 1-2 hand fulls a day. They are packed with nutrition and make a perfect snack. I also eat dark chocolate preferably if it has nuts in it.

    Like I said, there are many different approaches. This is my approach and it's been working for me and I'm loving the food I'm eating (bacon tastes so good). Last thing, don't get the idea that you have to be supremely rigid with your diet. Cheating is ok sometimes (tonight is pizza night for me). Just make considerations about how much nutrition you are actually getting from the cals you are consuming.
  • Beautyofdreams
    Beautyofdreams Posts: 1,009 Member
    I am female, 56 years old, 5'7" and started Mfp this spring over 200 lbs. I chose sedentary as my activity level and was given the same calories as OP. I also walk 5-6x a week and lift weights 4x a week. Be sure to eat some of your exercise calories back. Be patient. You are most likely holding on to water weight. I have lost 46.5 lbs since March. From May through July I lost at a rate of three pounds a month. Two pounds a week is not necessarily true for everyone. Don't give up and just keep at it OP. You will succeed.
  • charmmeth
    charmmeth Posts: 936 Member
    There is a useful link (posted in another MFP thread): https://physiqonomics.com/the-weird-and-highly-annoying-world-of-scale-weight-and-fluctuations/

    Others have said this, but I would suspect that you are eating too little. I am 5'11" and I find that eating 1200 cals per day is far too little for me and that I lose more consistently when I eat a little bit more, so my aim (before exercise calories), as suggested by mfp, is 1390 cals per day. I also eat try to eat a good balance of vegetables, fibre containing carbs (brown bread, brown rice), and protein. Even then, as others have said, plateaux are common along the journey: my own weight loss has been "stalled" between 80.5 and 80.0 kg for nearly three weeks, but this morning I was finally below 80 kg. It goes in fits and starts, up one day, down the next. I do weigh every day because it halps me to know that, but i also have a spreadsheet so I can remind myself of what has happened over the past few weeks/months: mfp will do that for you if you log your weight.
  • FibroHiker
    FibroHiker Posts: 398 Member
    I have had the same happen to me over the past few years. I would lose about 10 pounds, then stall out for weeks making no progress or fighting to maintain it, then start gaining it back, plus sometimes more. This year I did an elimination diet to figure out what was causing irritation or distress to my intestines. Then I continued to keep those foods out of my diet and cut back to an average of 1150-1300 calories daily. I typically burn between 2000 and 2150 daily. I have dropped almost 20 pounds since April and lost a lot of inches off my waist (no more inflamed gut). This is a first for me in in 6 years.

    Now I'm where I am my weight loss has slowed a little, but so far each week when I weigh in there's still some small progress since the previous week. The only times there is no progress is when I eat something I shouldn't have. A couple weeks ago I went to eat sushi and I think there was gluten in the roll filling. I gained 2.5 pounds immediately overnight even though my calories for the day were at a deficit of -750 cals.
  • natasor1
    natasor1 Posts: 271 Member
    I think nobody has to force themself to eat above satiety point. If you feel full, it means all your natural satiety quies are in place. Mother nature made everything for us to keep us strong and healthy. This is natural condition of human to be strong, healthy and happy. Why to bother with changing it ? Millions years of natural evolution premade this for us
  • Latrellis
    Latrellis Posts: 76 Member
    danielle71686 you've just started, be patient. 1-2 lbs a week isn't "average". 1 lb a week is great! You want to keep it off. I eat 1900-2000 & 200 or so carbs per day. I exercise a lot. Had a couple of wks I didn't lose anything, but then next wk, I lost 2.5 lbs. You can easily up your exercise. Watch the salad dressings, you can thin them w/water. An incentive to exercise more, the more muscle you have, the more calories you burn. Muscle takes up 22% less space than fat. Concentrate on eating healthy & recommend you focus on measurements, not so much weight. Food prep helps.

  • AshHeartsJesus
    AshHeartsJesus Posts: 460 Member
    Another thing to watch is sodium!! If you are eating lots of bread pasta rice fries and not paying attention to the sodium you will bloat very quickly I can eat 500 calories and go over on my sodium and feel like poo 💩
  • Give it the month. Your body is probably just shocked at the changes
  • Jacq_qui
    Jacq_qui Posts: 443 Member
    Also could you consider weighing daily for a bit - just so you can see daily fluctuations. In the last week my weight range has been within a 2kg band (which is unusual for me). If I'd weighed myself once a week, but on the day where I got the +2kg I'd have been really confused as to wth is going on - as that was my typical weight in July!
  • whitej1234
    whitej1234 Posts: 263 Member
    The scale might have a memory function. Meaning when you get on it if the previous reading is within 100-200gr of previous measure it will show the previous measure.

    Try getting on it holding something heavy (a big water bottle) so it shows a higher number and then again without the bottle. You might find that ounce.

    On a general note, as others mentioned you are restricting yourself too much. On top of being unhealthy and unsustainable in the long run it will also be rather inconsistent on the scale which will be discouraging. Take it easy on your body. Just do better then before and you will see results.

    Good luck
  • DanaDark
    DanaDark Posts: 2,187 Member
    Starting off can be pretty frustrating. A couple things come to mind when considering your situation...
    1. 1 Week is not enough time to determine what is and is not working
    2. Increased exercise will result in increased water retention
    3. You can lose 1 pound of fat and gain 2 pounds of water, frustrating the matter. But this is fine.
    4. If you have a digital scale, they can sometimes automatically state your previous weight if it is within a certain range. Use something to weigh on the scale to reset it so it doesn't do that perhaps (I managed to lose 0.8 pounds one time in 10 minutes by having a coffee according to the scale because of this)

    Anndd... you're not eating enough. At all.Barring some sort of medical issue, everyone no matter their weight/height/age will lose fat at 1200 calories a day. If you're comfortable at 1000-1200, you could consider some calories banked for a weekend.
  • ahoy_m8
    ahoy_m8 Posts: 3,053 Member
    edited September 2020
    A generic TDEE calculator puts your current daily energy need at ~2000 calories before exercise (sedentary other than intentional exercise). As your weight goes down, so does your daily energy need. But for now, 1500 calories/day will give you about 1 lb/week loss. More exercise will give you more calories at that rate of loss, which is a really good rate of loss.

    FWIW, I'm your height but weigh 100 lb less (ETA: and 20 years older) than you and I lose weight consistently on 1500 calories/day (0.5 lb/wk). The easiest thing to address is logging accuracy, and it's also the most likely thing that's amiss. I would focus on that first. Good luck, OP!
  • briscogun
    briscogun Posts: 1,138 Member
    whitej1234 wrote: »
    The scale might have a memory function. Meaning when you get on it if the previous reading is within 100-200gr of previous measure it will show the previous measure.

    Try getting on it holding something heavy (a big water bottle) so it shows a higher number and then again without the bottle. You might find that ounce.

    On a general note, as others mentioned you are restricting yourself too much. On top of being unhealthy and unsustainable in the long run it will also be rather inconsistent on the scale which will be discouraging. Take it easy on your body. Just do better then before and you will see results.

    Good luck

    I was going to post this as well. My scale has a memory function that will give me the same reading for days and days. "Oh Hi! You again? Here's the number I gave you last time. Ok see you tomorrow!" So I will just pop out the batteries from time to time to reset it and get a new reading.

    But, I think based upon a lot of the posts above you are probably consuming more calories than you think. It's a lot of work to really accurately measure and track every damn gram of food that goes in your mouth, but once you go through the exercises and start measuring you'll find that you start creating recipes for yourself in the database and eating the same foods consistently so it gets easier and easier. But yeah, it is work. But if it takes maybe 10 minutes all day to measure and log foods in order to drop the weight, in my book its worth it.

    MFP is a great tool, but if you are just throwing up figures for the sake of putting in figures its not really helping you. Your body is keeping perfect track of what you are eating, trust me!

    We've all been there and had to fine tune our approach. You'll get it just stay with it! Good luck!
  • AshHeartsJesus
    AshHeartsJesus Posts: 460 Member
    Well poop I didn't know that about digital scales 😲
  • gazpainter
    gazpainter Posts: 22 Member
    edited September 2020
    My other half is female, 40 and overweight. She was like 12 stone 3 and in 8 weeks gone to 11 stone 1 by having protein meal replacement shake which one scoop with water for breakfast and lunch (200 calories a times) then a normal meal and some crackers in the evening and weekends we have bread for lunch etc. We have a takeaway ever 2 weeks as a treat too!

    Workout les Mills 6 times a week 1 hr mixture of attack and pump. Works a treat.

    Walking will do nothing. Exercise and control of food is key.

    Get your heart rate up to 170/180 for a decent burn, get burpess and press ups and mountain climbers in...

    Diet and walking will take years... Exercise and diet massively accelerates the process... At least an hour a day 6 days a week and 1500 calories a day works a treat!
  • gazpainter
    gazpainter Posts: 22 Member
    edited September 2020
    Walking 15 to 20 mins total a mile burns around 80 calories

    Exercise like hiit for 20 mins burns about 250 to 350.

    Its all down to how quickly you want results.

    You walk a mile a day 7 days a week, you burn 760 a week on top of daily burn.

    Hiit 5 times a week for 20 mins (which is no time at all) will burn 1500.

    So less exercise days but same amount of time and double the burn... Double the calories burned... Simple as that...

    If you have more than 20lbs to lose... Trust me from experience, walking and diet will take over a year easily... And how long can you stay at a big calorie reduction without falling off the wagon?
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