Plateau - help!
Bulldogs1717
Posts: 47 Member
Hi all
I have been trying to lose the last 5 lbs for what feels like forever. I weight train 3 days a week, run 5 days a week, and have been eating at a slight deficit for weeks now. I do drink alcohol socially so maybe that’s the problem but I’m just very frustrated because I feel like besides that I do all the right things but am stuck on the scale and struggling with bloat, etc. anyone else experienced this? I know it’s not all about weight- I am 5’3 and 125 lbs and 16% body fat but i feel I’m so bloated often and just not getting the scale or the % to budge. Any thoughts would be appreciated!
I have been trying to lose the last 5 lbs for what feels like forever. I weight train 3 days a week, run 5 days a week, and have been eating at a slight deficit for weeks now. I do drink alcohol socially so maybe that’s the problem but I’m just very frustrated because I feel like besides that I do all the right things but am stuck on the scale and struggling with bloat, etc. anyone else experienced this? I know it’s not all about weight- I am 5’3 and 125 lbs and 16% body fat but i feel I’m so bloated often and just not getting the scale or the % to budge. Any thoughts would be appreciated!
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Replies
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With so little to lose you are going to need to count everything really carefully since you don't really have any room for errors.
Are you using a food scale and weighing everything that you eat?3 -
One of the things about a slight deficit is that it can take literally weeks to show up on the scale. I've been losing a few vanity pounds ultra-slowly, by intention, since October 2019, though I consider myself to be in maintenance over all.
Even in my trending app it ends up looking like I'm maintaining, even *gaining* sometimes, for *weeks* at a time, let alone looking at the scale and trying to figure it out. 😆 🤣
Nonetheless, I'm down 10+ pounds, cumulatively, over that time.
In year 5 of routine calorie counting, I know my body pretty well (including calorie needs in various scenarios), and I trust my counting process (it's proven itself over time). I've stayed at a healthy weight for nearly 5 years, after several previous decades of obesity.)
The PP is right: For slow loss, counting accuracy becomes more important. I figure I've been at around a 150 calorie or so daily deficit these months, on average. I don't need too many mistakes or misestimatesb to wipe that out.
Even if you're going for half a pound a week (250 deficit), it doesn't take much imprecision to cut that down to slower loss, and even the half a pound a week will hide on the scale for looonnnggg time periods
Best wishes for that last 5 shrinking away for you!
ETA: FWIW, I still drink alcohol, usually only when my required nutrition is already taken care of (mostly vessy, with exercise calories, in my case).. As long the alcohol's within calorie goal, my weight does what I'd expect, though I agree that it can affect calorie compliance or logging accuracy unless we're vigilant.7 -
Weight training is killing you in this scenario. Cardio.....0
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And scales are liars. The mirror never lies0
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gabrielcurran2243 wrote: »Weight training is killing you in this scenario. Cardio.....
A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition
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Thank you all for your replies. To be clear- I’d like to lose 5 lbs of fat and what I believe to be excessive water retention, as opposed to muscle, so that’s why I’m keeping the weight lifting in place. I have been keeping an aggressive calorie deficit to try and manage this- 500ish a day with one day a week that I eat at maintenance amount. Do you feel I should reduce this deficit and just have more patience as described?
Thanks again for all the advice just trying to brainstorm so I can get over this hump!0 -
I gained these few ponds during the Covid situation so I know it’s not a lot, but I just felt healthier without those extra few pounds of fat on my body both mentally and physically.0
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@ninerbuff I will. I did. ^^
I'm here to report your tips really work. Humans thrive on routine and when you get in the groove, your zone.... you'll know it. Keep that momentum going and don't stop.0 -
So you would say to keep the weight lifting in addition to cardio correct? Just up the intensity of both?0
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Up the intensity of both if you can. If you can’t, I would increase the intensity of weight training.
However, 500 calorie deficit a day with so little to lose is too high. That’s a 1 lb per week loss and completely unrealistic with only 5 lbs left to go.2 -
Keep both. Advice to drop lifting and do only more cardio was wrong, IMO (shortsighted).
Cardio butns more calories per minute, but strength training preserves muscle mass, improves strength, is important for well-rounded health/fitness.
You want a little more calorie burn, so increase cardio or weight training intensity, frequency or duration (if that's possible without causing counterproductive fatigue levels), and/or increase movement in daily life activities.
Plus patience.4 -
Bulldogs1717 wrote: »So you would say to keep the weight lifting in addition to cardio correct? Just up the intensity of both?
A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition
1
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