Anyone else gain/hold on to weight when exercising?? Very discouraging.
butterfli7o
Posts: 1,319 Member
In a nutshell, I find that whenever I start an exercise program I end up quitting because I swear, I weigh more when I exercise. I realize this is going to happen at first because of DOMS (I get sore easily) but I've been working out regularly a solid month and my weight is staying up. To verify, I work out 20-30 mins at least 5 days a week, so I'm not killing myself with it. I drink more water now than I've ever done. Because my workouts are not hardcore, I don't eat my small amount of calories back. Yet my weight is not budging. I'm confused and discouraged...yes, it's only been a solid month but I was hoping for at least a half a pound loss per week. Obviously I know that working out is not really hurting me, so I'm going to keep it up. I guess I was just wondering if this happens to anyone else. I always remember after the fact that this is why I stop working out, it doesn't seem to assist my calorie deficit. Help anyone?
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Replies
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..and just to get the usual questions out of the way, are you measuring your food with cups, or are you weighing it on a food scale? Are you double checking entries in your diary against package info to ensure you're choosing correct entries? What is your calorie goal, current height/weight, and how much are you looking to lose?0
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I weigh with both and try to overestimate to allow a little wiggle room. Yes, I am good about double checking packages and entries in the system as I know they can be wayyyy off. Right now I have my calorie goal set to 1,270-1,300 (again, I try to allow for some wiggle room if I am not on point that day) I'm 5'3, 144lbs and almost 43. I'm trying (trying being the key word) to just lose 15 pounds, although even 10 at this point would thrill me.2
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All right, thanks for all of that.
So, with that little to lose, first thing to know is that its going to come off slooooooowwwwlllly. You have a lot less of a calorie deficit to work with and .5 a lb might end up being more .25 lb a week for awhile (which was the case when I did .5 a week a few years ago...frustrating but I was like, well, I guess its better than nothing..lol). Another thing that happened to me at that point was that my weight loss was never showing up weekly like clockwork...oftentimes I'd have a "whoosh" about once a month or so (after my cycle most of the time) and drop 2-3 lbs, then another solid month of nothing. If your exercise routine is fairly new, you might even be having the case of your DOMS and your cycle timing (assuming that applies to you) working against you to mask weight loss.3 -
Keep up the exercise but to be honest 20 minutes a day is not a lot, guven that and measure error on food intake and calories burned any difference may be lost in rounding/meaning error.2
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Theoldguy1 wrote: »Keep up the exercise but to be honest 20 minutes a day is not a lot, guven that and measure error on food intake and calories burned any difference may be lost in rounding/meaning error.
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It's not only inflammation that can mean you hold on to water weight, the greater need of someone exercising for glycogen (which is stored along with 3 or 4 times as much water) can mean that weight cancels out your weight lost through fat loss.
But surely you want to lose fat and not just water?
If you are in a deficit over time you are losing fat and getting leaner, even if for a while (even a long while) you stay the same weight.
Not only do you know exercise isn't hurting you you also know it's making you more healthy - you are barely doing the minimum but even that is hugely advantageous for your long term health. Giving up what should become a healthy habit for life just becasue your bathroom scales show a disappointing number is a real shame.
Have a serious think about what exercise is really for.8 -
best messages are conveyed through a story... and so many moons ago my buddy bought a beautiful house in a richy neighborhood, my friend was 10 years older than me, and much wiser, I thought of him as the big brother I never had, so when he asked me to come over and fill in the most gorgeous swimming pool I have ever seen, of course I offered to help, you see they had three small children, their house was in the shape of a U and the pool filled the entire opening between all three sides and was only like 18" away from the walls, very dangerous for small kids, and no back yard to play in
he ordered I think 5 trucks of dirt or something ridiculous, the trucks couldn't just dump the dirt in the pool because of a big long wall, and only a tiny gate to his yard
I asked him oh man how long is this gonna take, he handed me a shovel and said start working, and so we began shoveling the dirt in the pool
on the second day seeing that we didn't put a dent in the pile of dirt in the driveway nor did the pool look filled I asked him, hey man you got a wheel barrel or something, and he looked up at me and said keep working
later that week, I took a water break and once again saw no difference in the huge pile of dirt in his driveway and begged him to rent a bobcat to use a machine to move the dirt, he sipped his water looked at me and said, keep working
couple weeks later, I've had it, there was a ton of dirt left in the driveway, and the pool was no where full, I said, brother, please can we at least rent a conveyor belt, and he smiled at me and said keep working
this went on for the entire summer, my back was sore, my hands had calluses on them, and it seemed like from day to day there was no difference in the pile of dirt in his driveway, and the stupid pool in his yard
then one day I showed up and he was sweeping the last of the dirt in the driveway, and his kids were playing outside in the dirt in his yard where his pool used to be, his wife made some fresh lemonade for us, and we sat on some lawn chairs looked at one another and said damn we moved a ton of dirt (technically possibly 10 tons, who knows)
you may think I'm an idiot, or you may find a message in this story somewhere, for I swear it is true12 -
It's not only inflammation that can mean you hold on to water weight, the greater need of someone exercising for glycogen (which is stored along with 3 or 4 times as much water) can mean that weight cancels out your weight lost through fat loss.
But surely you want to lose fat and not just water?
If you are in a deficit over time you are losing fat and getting leaner, even if for a while (even a long while) you stay the same weight.
Not only do you know exercise isn't hurting you you also know it's making you more healthy - you are barely doing the minimum but even that is hugely advantageous for your long term health. Giving up what should become a healthy habit for life just becasue your bathroom scales show a disappointing number is a real shame.
Have a serious think about what exercise is really for.
I'm going to keep it up, again just trying not to get discouraged.
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Tiny steps for tiny feet. It all begins with one step so make it a small one. Patience and consistency for the WIN.
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butterfli7o wrote: »It's not only inflammation that can mean you hold on to water weight, the greater need of someone exercising for glycogen (which is stored along with 3 or 4 times as much water) can mean that weight cancels out your weight lost through fat loss.
But surely you want to lose fat and not just water?
If you are in a deficit over time you are losing fat and getting leaner, even if for a while (even a long while) you stay the same weight.
Not only do you know exercise isn't hurting you you also know it's making you more healthy - you are barely doing the minimum but even that is hugely advantageous for your long term health. Giving up what should become a healthy habit for life just becasue your bathroom scales show a disappointing number is a real shame.
Have a serious think about what exercise is really for.
I'm going to keep it up, again just trying not to get discouraged.
Yay!
Great news.
:flowerforyou:0 -
The weight will come off! My stats are similar to yours - 5’3, but older - 56 - approximately the same hours of exercise and also did not eat all my exercise calories to allow wiggle room and logging errors.
I was at 145 in September 2020, and now 117 - a weight I thought I’d never see - below my high school weight. My original goal was 135. Sometimes for weeks my weight would stay the same - to the tenth of a digit - then a minor loss of .25 lbs. Soooooo sloooooooow. I was though losing inches - I had a pair of pants I’d put on weekly and that kept me motivated. Are you losing inches?
What did help me was increasing my NEAT - in any way I could. I’d keep ear phones in and dance while washing dishes, cleaning, would get up from tv watching during commercials and do leg lifts - anything. Once I did three loads of laundry and took ONE single piece of laundry from the basement to the third floor and back down to increase my steps - one towel, one sock, one sheet at a time - (not sure if I’ll do that again!)
But the weight will come off. I know that scale is the devil 😀 but don’t get discouraged!5 -
CeeBeeSlim wrote: »The weight will come off! My stats are similar to yours - 5’3, but older - 56 - approximately the same hours of exercise and also did not eat all my exercise calories to allow wiggle room and logging errors.
I was at 145 in September 2020, and now 117 - a weight I thought I’d never see - below my high school weight. My original goal was 135. Sometimes for weeks my weight would stay the same - to the tenth of a digit - then a minor loss of .25 lbs. Soooooo sloooooooow. I was though losing inches - I had a pair of pants I’d put on weekly and that kept me motivated. Are you losing inches?
What did help me was increasing my NEAT - in any way I could. I’d keep ear phones in and dance while washing dishes, cleaning, would get up from tv watching during commercials and do leg lifts - anything. Once I did three loads of laundry and took ONE single piece of laundry from the basement to the third floor and back down to increase my steps - one towel, one sock, one sheet at a time - (not sure if I’ll do that again!)
But the weight will come off. I know that scale is the devil 😀 but don’t get discouraged!
I think there might be a typo in the date . . . do you mean September 2019 was when you were 145?2 -
@janejellyroll - 😂. Thanks for the catch! Yes, a big typo! If only my weight loss was that fast...(not a good thing, though, as I’ve learned). Thanks again. Apologies for the confusion.0
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CeeBeeSlim wrote: »@janejellyroll - 😂. Thanks for the catch! Yes, a big typo! If only my weight loss was that fast...(not a good thing, though, as I’ve learned). Thanks again. Apologies for the confusion.
Amazing results!
I used the same trick with pants when I was losing weight (I went from about 155 to 110). It can be a great motivation when you haven't seen a loss that week and want something else to focus on.1 -
butterfli7o wrote: »In a nutshell, I find that whenever I start an exercise program I end up quitting because I swear, I weigh more when I exercise. I realize this is going to happen at first because of DOMS (I get sore easily) but I've been working out regularly a solid month and my weight is staying up. To verify, I work out 20-30 mins at least 5 days a week, so I'm not killing myself with it. I drink more water now than I've ever done. Because my workouts are not hardcore, I don't eat my small amount of calories back. Yet my weight is not budging. I'm confused and discouraged...yes, it's only been a solid month but I was hoping for at least a half a pound loss per week. Obviously I know that working out is not really hurting me, so I'm going to keep it up. I guess I was just wondering if this happens to anyone else. I always remember after the fact that this is why I stop working out, it doesn't seem to assist my calorie deficit. Help anyone?
This used to be my issue- I would start and stop exercise which meant I kept getting DOMs and so the water weight continued plus I had a small deficit too. Once I stuck to it the weight suddenly came off after 8-9 weeks, and I dropped 4 lbs. Plus I would stop giving the scale so much importance because exercise will help you in so many other ways! Fatloss is more about your food than exercise.4 -
My weight tend to do the same thing.. it fluctuates more whenever I work out, when I don't workout for a week but stay on my cal restrictions my weight steadily drops. Don't be discourage, I vent on my page sometimes, just cause. 😝 Just continue killing it, you will reach your goals eventually.3
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Increasing exercise increases water retention. So do other things. Against a backdrop of a slow loss rate (that half a pound a week thing), the scale is a really, really poor guide to what's actually happening to fat levels, in anything less than multiple MONTHS. That doesn't mean nothing is happening.
I'm in year 5 of maintenance now, after losing 60 pounds, so I really trust my process (details of calorie counting, what my maintenance calories are, effects of exercise and more). Over about the past year, I've been losing a few vanity pounds ultra-slowly, averaging half a pound a week or less. (I like painless, especially for vanity pounds.)
I'm going to share my recent Libra (weight trending app) chart, then add a few comments after the image. The horizontal to downhill-ish connected line is my weight trend (just a statistical thing, kind of a rolling average). It's supposed to dampen out the effect of daily fluctuations. The little vertical lines connect my daily weigh-ins to the trend line. (More comments below.)
Over this period, mostly nothing much changed. There are occasional over-goal days in there (which account for some of the high daily weigh-ins, mostly from water weight & digestive contents changes). But clearly, over the overall timespan, the overall trend is very slow loss.
Now, look at July specifically. The trend starts about 129.5, ends up just a tiny bit lower. The first 2-3 of weeks look like gain, in the trend line. The daily weights are crazy-fluctuate-y. I didn't change much of anything in July . . . except for one small thing. I (re-)started a strength training routine. We're not talking long sessions, daily sessions, or heavy weights. We're talking a li'l ol' lady doing some basic conditioning with lighter weights, 3 times a week, for maybe half an hour each time: Not dramatic.
From experience, I know I can add around 2 pounds of water weight when I resume strength training, and I'll hold that weight until I stop strength training: Just how my body behaves, others may differ. But look at August: That slow fat loss starts showing through the fog of water weight (. . . and then I eat some crazy salty carby things, plus it's hot, and all of that drives the water weight up again. 🤣 )
That's how really slow weight loss looks in real life. In mid-April, I was around 132-133. SIx months later, in mid-October, I'm around 125-26. Sounds like about half a pound a week, maybe a tad more, of fat loss, on average. But a roller coaster ride along the way!
If you think you've got your process working right, hang in there for longer. You have a source of variation (I suspect) that I don't, since I'm in menopause so don't have monthly hormone cycles that do crazy things to water weight. If you don't see results over a much longer time span (2-3 months), be aware that calorie needs calculators are just estimates, so you may need to adjust. (I think that's probably not it, if your numbers are accurate.)
Slow weight loss is painless in some ways (eating! energy!) but the scale can be stressful, if you allow it to be.
Best wishes!3 -
Just a side note, but I use a digital scale, and whenever it seems to not be budging for a while, I take out the batteries and reset it. It will usually show a different number after that. Mine seems to have a "memory"...
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Just a side note, but I use a digital scale, and whenever it seems to not be budging for a while, I take out the batteries and reset it. It will usually show a different number after that. Mine seems to have a "memory"...
Mine also has a memory. What works for me is to grab something heavy, weigh myself holding it, and then step on again. That usually gives me a new weight when it seems "stuck."6 -
CeeBeeSlim wrote: »The weight will come off! My stats are similar to yours - 5’3, but older - 56 - approximately the same hours of exercise and also did not eat all my exercise calories to allow wiggle room and logging errors.
I was at 145 in September 2020, and now 117 - a weight I thought I’d never see - below my high school weight. My original goal was 135. Sometimes for weeks my weight would stay the same - to the tenth of a digit - then a minor loss of .25 lbs. Soooooo sloooooooow. I was though losing inches - I had a pair of pants I’d put on weekly and that kept me motivated. Are you losing inches?
What did help me was increasing my NEAT - in any way I could. I’d keep ear phones in and dance while washing dishes, cleaning, would get up from tv watching during commercials and do leg lifts - anything. Once I did three loads of laundry and took ONE single piece of laundry from the basement to the third floor and back down to increase my steps - one towel, one sock, one sheet at a time - (not sure if I’ll do that again!)
But the weight will come off. I know that scale is the devil 😀 but don’t get discouraged!
Definitely needed to hear this!0 -
Keep at it. It's SO HARD to be patient when you're losing slowly. I would love to lose a pound a week. This 14 pounds would have been off by Christmas if I wanted to crash diet and just get it off. But at what cost? I have enough to lose that I will notice it someday, but not enough to notice at a weekly weigh in. One way I stay on track is to sort of forget about it for a while. Keep up with my program-log my food and workouts, but not really pay attention to my weight because from one week to the next, any loss can be disguised as a gain, discouraging me, and making me think, "What's the point? Why even try?" But I know why. And I know the point. I'll get there.4
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dragon_girl26 wrote: »All right, thanks for all of that.
So, with that little to lose, first thing to know is that its going to come off slooooooowwwwlllly. You have a lot less of a calorie deficit to work with and .5 a lb might end up being more .25 lb a week for awhile (which was the case when I did .5 a week a few years ago...frustrating but I was like, well, I guess its better than nothing..lol). Another thing that happened to me at that point was that my weight loss was never showing up weekly like clockwork...oftentimes I'd have a "whoosh" about once a month or so (after my cycle most of the time) and drop 2-3 lbs, then another solid month of nothing. If your exercise routine is fairly new, you might even be having the case of your DOMS and your cycle timing (assuming that applies to you) working against you to mask weight loss.
That what happens to me! I’ve gone from 126.6 to 113 from April to now and I’ve had an entire month where I lose nothing and then poof I’m down a full pound or two magically.2 -
I recently experienced this when I reintroduced weight lifting. I had been losing and it caused me to stall for a few weeks. It's annoying, but sometimes you gotta take a step back from the scale, stick to your guns, and think long term. IMO the benefits of continuing to weight lift is a fair trade for an extra 3 lbs. I am sure I still burned away a bit of fat during those weeks, the numbers on the scale were just temporarily masked, but I'm seeing scale progress again now.
The good news is you are aware of what causes the weight gain. Now it's just time to decide if instant gratification is worth trading away longer term benefits.2 -
YES. thank you for posting this, I'm really stuck at the moment. It's definitely easy to get discouraged, and at one point in my life I would have found it easy to give up, but these days but I tend to get more stubborn about it. I am going to beat this, I'm not quitting, I have to just keep going and wait. Because what's the alternative?? Like you, I enjoy a morning HIIT - and I've literally started back at the gym again since the pandemic - lost quite a bit of strength. But it makes me more determined. My mother said yesterday ''oh maybe this is just your happy weight'' -No chance!! The stories we tell ourselves are the most important of all the stories we hear - I'm telling myself 'I'm not done yet'' Keep on keeping on! Add me if you want and let me know when the scales move2
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Weight is just one metric of progress and is often misleading. Take pictures and measurements and note how clothes feel instead.5
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Take pictures and measure your body fat% using calipers, tape measure, or DEXA scan once a month or every couple of weeks. As long as you're eating at a caloric deficit, you'll still lose fat.2
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Your post caught my attention because I am dealing with the same struggles. This isn't my first rodeo - I lost ~15lbs about seven years ago through diet and weightlifting and got down to 125lb. However, life happened and I gained it all back plus some. I am 35yo, 5'7, re-starting my fitness journey at 158 (28% BF measured by a PT).
It has been almost a month of eating TDEE-500 cals, full-body moderately-heavy lifting (3 sets of 10 reps on standard barbell movements + some accessory work) 3x week, and LISS cardio 3x week.
My weight has increased by 5lbs. My measurements are the same. Every day I step on the scales, I look at a new record high weight and want to throw in the towel. It wasn't this hard last time. The last time, I was able to lose the 15lbs in three months and then focused on a recomp for a year or so. I'm doing the same exact things that worked before and I am getting opposite results.
Sorry I don't have any advice, just wanted to commensurate.1 -
a_vettestingray wrote: »Your post caught my attention because I am dealing with the same struggles. This isn't my first rodeo - I lost ~15lbs about seven years ago through diet and weightlifting and got down to 125lb. However, life happened and I gained it all back plus some. I am 35yo, 5'7, re-starting my fitness journey at 158 (28% BF measured by a PT).
It has been almost a month of eating TDEE-500 cals, full-body moderately-heavy lifting (3 sets of 10 reps on standard barbell movements + some accessory work) 3x week, and LISS cardio 3x week.
My weight has increased by 5lbs. My measurements are the same. Every day I step on the scales, I look at a new record high weight and want to throw in the towel. It wasn't this hard last time. The last time, I was able to lose the 15lbs in three months and then focused on a recomp for a year or so. I'm doing the same exact things that worked before and I am getting opposite results.
Sorry I don't have any advice, just wanted to commensurate.
Well, you're not alone. I don't plan on stopping...we just have to push through.0 -
It's lean muscle mass0
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domeofstars wrote: »It's lean muscle mass
Highly unlikely. A woman under perfect conditions (which don't include a calorie deficit) would be doing well to gain a pound of muscle in a month, maybe twice that for a man. With a calorie deficit in the picture, pretty much no probable rate of muscle mass gain outpaces any meaningful rate of fat loss, sadly. Get stronger? Sure, from neuromuscular adaptation. Maybe look a little more taut or defined? Maybe, from water retention in the muscles . . . which also shows up on the scale.
I sure wish muscle gain were that fast/easy for women.2
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