Just can't loose anything
crystalbluewolf13
Posts: 197 Member
I don't eat crap, I exercise everyday and I'm always under my calories 1,900. But the scale isn't shifting and I'm not loosing any inches either. I'm trying to eat more to make up my calories but I struggle to do this I normally get between 1,300-1,700 if I force myself to eat but I'm not hungry. What can I do because I'm stuck at 16st 12 and I size 18. It's killing my motivation now
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Replies
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crystalbluewolf13 wrote: »I don't eat crap, I exercise everyday and I'm always under my calories 1,900. But the scale isn't shifting and I'm not loosing any inches either. I'm trying to eat more to make up my calories but I struggle to do this I normally get between 1,300-1,700 if I force myself to eat but I'm not hungry. What can I do because I'm stuck at 16st 12 and I size 18. It's killing my motivation now
How long have you been stuck?
How much exercise are you doing each day?
Are you using a food scale?5 -
So, there are the generic questions that have to get out of the way first. Don't take them personally if your reaction is "yeah, I do that anyway." or " yeah, I know that."
How long have you been plateauing? If it's just 1, 2 weeks you may not need to change anything, but just wait it out.
How do you measure your calorie intake? Do you guestimated, usdevcups and other volume measures, or use scales. - Generally scales will be more accurate. How you measure one tablespoon of peanut butter and how I measure the same might differ by quite a bit, but 15 gram are always the same.
How much have you lost before that plateau? If it is more than 3 kg of thereabouts, did you decide to recalculate your calorie goals? You may need to take in less calories to maintain your weight loss rate than when you started things.
How sure are you you need 1900 calories a day? Maybe you are overestimating your activity level or how many calories your exercises burn, and that is the problem.
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Also, dont give up. Weight loss can be a bit trial and error. But you can figure things out and get thd scale moving again. Really!3 -
crystalbluewolf13 wrote: »I don't eat crap, I exercise everyday and I'm always under my calories 1,900. But the scale isn't shifting and I'm not loosing any inches either. I'm trying to eat more to make up my calories but I struggle to do this I normally get between 1,300-1,700 if I force myself to eat but I'm not hungry. What can I do because I'm stuck at 16st 12 and I size 18. It's killing my motivation now
This is the pattern that will result in throwing in the towel and eating it all back. The inches have to catch up with the pounds. Do you whats going on inside internally while you lose all of this weight? So many things are happening inside with your internal organs. Dropping it like it's hot is not all it's cracked up to be.
Stay the course and to hail with rapid weight loss. Aim for .5 lbs a week and if there are weeks you are not losing it's still a big WIN because you are not gaining. Do you know the percentage of people that actually maintain their original weight loss at the 2 year mark? The 5 year mark percentages are even smaller.
Rebound weight gain with friends happens more often with rapid weight loss than edging your way down slowly. This is a thinking thing. It's a brain thing. So much of this stuff is mental and you are waging a war with your brain. Don't listen to it. Engage it. Engage your brain and harness it like you would a stubborn mule.
Engage your brain as a tool but don't listen to it talk back to you. Tell your brain to shut-up and keep tooling along. You're going to be dealing with this in Maintenance, too. Don't think it's just the weight loss process because there is no such thing as the Finish Line. Stay the course. Do not throw in the towel.
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How long have you been stuck?
How much exercise are you doing each day?
Are you using a food scale?[/quote]
About 2 months, I do calastetics every morning and as much walking as I can. Yes I weigh everything1 -
AndreaTamira wrote: »So, there are the generic questions that have to get out of the way first. Don't take them personally if your reaction is "yeah, I do that anyway." or " yeah, I know that."
How long have you been plateauing? If it's just 1, 2 weeks you may not need to change anything, but just wait it out.
How do you measure your calorie intake? Do you guestimated, usdevcups and other volume measures, or use scales. - Generally scales will be more accurate. How you measure one tablespoon of peanut butter and how I measure the same might differ by quite a bit, but 15 gram are always the same.
How much have you lost before that plateau? If it is more than 3 kg of thereabouts, did you decide to recalculate your calorie goals? You may need to take in less calories to maintain your weight loss rate than when you started things.
How sure are you you need 1900 calories a day? Maybe you are overestimating your activity level or how many calories your exercises burn, and that is the problem.
---
Also, dont give up. Weight loss can be a bit trial and error. But you can figure things out and get thd scale moving again. Really!
About 2 months. I weigh or measure everything using measuring devices and scales. I've only lost 4lb. I got the 1900 based on my bmr0 -
crystalbluewolf13 wrote: »AndreaTamira wrote: »So, there are the generic questions that have to get out of the way first. Don't take them personally if your reaction is "yeah, I do that anyway." or " yeah, I know that."
How long have you been plateauing? If it's just 1, 2 weeks you may not need to change anything, but just wait it out.
How do you measure your calorie intake? Do you guestimated, usdevcups and other volume measures, or use scales. - Generally scales will be more accurate. How you measure one tablespoon of peanut butter and how I measure the same might differ by quite a bit, but 15 gram are always the same.
How much have you lost before that plateau? If it is more than 3 kg of thereabouts, did you decide to recalculate your calorie goals? You may need to take in less calories to maintain your weight loss rate than when you started things.
How sure are you you need 1900 calories a day? Maybe you are overestimating your activity level or how many calories your exercises burn, and that is the problem.
---
Also, dont give up. Weight loss can be a bit trial and error. But you can figure things out and get thd scale moving again. Really!
About 2 months. I weigh or measure everything using measuring devices and scales. I've only lost 4lb. I got the 1900 based on my bmr
What are you weighing with “measuring devices” that aren’t a scale??? Odds are very good that those “measuring devices” are inaccurate and you are consuming more calories than you think you are.
Have you lost 4 lbs in 2 months? If so, you are losing .5 a week on average. Tighten up the tracking and you will most likely lose more.3 -
Also, if you exercise, don’t overestimate your exercise calories. That is another common mistake that people make.4
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Dogmom1978 wrote: »crystalbluewolf13 wrote: »AndreaTamira wrote: »So, there are the generic questions that have to get out of the way first. Don't take them personally if your reaction is "yeah, I do that anyway." or " yeah, I know that."
How long have you been plateauing? If it's just 1, 2 weeks you may not need to change anything, but just wait it out.
How do you measure your calorie intake? Do you guestimated, usdevcups and other volume measures, or use scales. - Generally scales will be more accurate. How you measure one tablespoon of peanut butter and how I measure the same might differ by quite a bit, but 15 gram are always the same.
How much have you lost before that plateau? If it is more than 3 kg of thereabouts, did you decide to recalculate your calorie goals? You may need to take in less calories to maintain your weight loss rate than when you started things.
How sure are you you need 1900 calories a day? Maybe you are overestimating your activity level or how many calories your exercises burn, and that is the problem.
---
Also, dont give up. Weight loss can be a bit trial and error. But you can figure things out and get thd scale moving again. Really!
About 2 months. I weigh or measure everything using measuring devices and scales. I've only lost 4lb. I got the 1900 based on my bmr
What are you weighing with “measuring devices” that aren’t a scale??? Odds are very good that those “measuring devices” are inaccurate and you are consuming more calories than you think you are.
Have you lost 4 lbs in 2 months? If so, you are losing .5 a week on average. Tighten up the tracking and you will most likely lose more.
Measuring cups, measuring scales, jugs, measuring spoons. And I don't eat back exercise calories as I don't add them to my diary1 -
Use a scale and weigh everything solid. Even things like a slice of bread - surprise they don't all weigh the same even though the label implies they do. Only use cups/spoons for liquids. Solid food is not accurately 'measured' so that is why the food scale is useful.
Log your consumption based on weight in grams. Account for cooking oils, beverages, etc. Try not to 'taste' while cooking - those tastes add up, and its impossible to track accurately. If you have small children, try to avoid having bites of their food as well.
If you often eat food made by others (friends, family, restaurants) then try to be more involved in your own food prep. Eating food made by others requires estimation, and right now accuracy is your goal since you're not happy with your rate of loss.3 -
crystalbluewolf13 wrote: »Dogmom1978 wrote: »crystalbluewolf13 wrote: »AndreaTamira wrote: »So, there are the generic questions that have to get out of the way first. Don't take them personally if your reaction is "yeah, I do that anyway." or " yeah, I know that."
How long have you been plateauing? If it's just 1, 2 weeks you may not need to change anything, but just wait it out.
How do you measure your calorie intake? Do you guestimated, usdevcups and other volume measures, or use scales. - Generally scales will be more accurate. How you measure one tablespoon of peanut butter and how I measure the same might differ by quite a bit, but 15 gram are always the same.
How much have you lost before that plateau? If it is more than 3 kg of thereabouts, did you decide to recalculate your calorie goals? You may need to take in less calories to maintain your weight loss rate than when you started things.
How sure are you you need 1900 calories a day? Maybe you are overestimating your activity level or how many calories your exercises burn, and that is the problem.
---
Also, dont give up. Weight loss can be a bit trial and error. But you can figure things out and get thd scale moving again. Really!
About 2 months. I weigh or measure everything using measuring devices and scales. I've only lost 4lb. I got the 1900 based on my bmr
What are you weighing with “measuring devices” that aren’t a scale??? Odds are very good that those “measuring devices” are inaccurate and you are consuming more calories than you think you are.
Have you lost 4 lbs in 2 months? If so, you are losing .5 a week on average. Tighten up the tracking and you will most likely lose more.
Measuring cups, measuring scales, jugs, measuring spoons. And I don't eat back exercise calories as I don't add them to my diary
^^^
This! Measuring cups, spoons, etc are wildly “inaccurate” in the sense that you can really pack a measuring cup full and you can really have a heaping tablespoon of something. Use a food scale. If you don’t have one, buy one. You can get one at Walmart for around $20.
I can almost guarantee that you are eating more than you think you are. And depending on your exercise level, you probably should track it and eat a portion back so that you don’t burn out, unless of course, you set yourself to highly active and that is why you don’t track it. If it’s the latter, you’re eating them back anyway as you will get a higher calorie goal for the day.4 -
@crystalbluewolf13 - I’ve been you, January to August I jumped the same 2lb up and down, but nothing more. I’ve been determined, frustrated, resigned, you name it, and still no results.
In August I realized that many people seem to have a problem with maintenance and somehow that’s the part that I learned and practiced well, so chucked it as intended maintenance and close that door (for now).
Now I’m into the 4th month of learning how to lose weight and all the posts above me covered that well.
Wish you great patience and good luck in your journey!4 -
Maybe try intermittent fasting, I think maybe your calories are too high I cannot lose above 1600 calories4
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angelexperiment wrote: »Maybe try intermittent fasting, I think maybe your calories are too high I cannot lose above 1600 calories
Lol no.3 -
crystalbluewolf13 wrote: »Dogmom1978 wrote: »crystalbluewolf13 wrote: »AndreaTamira wrote: »So, there are the generic questions that have to get out of the way first. Don't take them personally if your reaction is "yeah, I do that anyway." or " yeah, I know that."
How long have you been plateauing? If it's just 1, 2 weeks you may not need to change anything, but just wait it out.
How do you measure your calorie intake? Do you guestimated, usdevcups and other volume measures, or use scales. - Generally scales will be more accurate. How you measure one tablespoon of peanut butter and how I measure the same might differ by quite a bit, but 15 gram are always the same.
How much have you lost before that plateau? If it is more than 3 kg of thereabouts, did you decide to recalculate your calorie goals? You may need to take in less calories to maintain your weight loss rate than when you started things.
How sure are you you need 1900 calories a day? Maybe you are overestimating your activity level or how many calories your exercises burn, and that is the problem.
---
Also, dont give up. Weight loss can be a bit trial and error. But you can figure things out and get thd scale moving again. Really!
About 2 months. I weigh or measure everything using measuring devices and scales. I've only lost 4lb. I got the 1900 based on my bmr
What are you weighing with “measuring devices” that aren’t a scale??? Odds are very good that those “measuring devices” are inaccurate and you are consuming more calories than you think you are.
Have you lost 4 lbs in 2 months? If so, you are losing .5 a week on average. Tighten up the tracking and you will most likely lose more.
Measuring cups, measuring scales, jugs, measuring spoons. And I don't eat back exercise calories as I don't add them to my diary
This is why. Use a food scale.3 -
Are you including literally everything that passes your lips? Including all liquids that aren't water?0
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Sorry but 1 more time, are you weighing everything except liquids?
How often do you encounter calorie counting gray areas in the course of a week? Restaurants, social functions? Meals you don’t prepare? You can keep tinkering under the hood until you find an answer.
Or try it this way. Regardless of how you come up with the numbers, do you think you are counting consistently? If yes, then forget the calculators and pick a number. You already know that you maintain between 1300 and 1700 calories. But that’s a big spread. What’s your weekly average over these 2 months? But find what you think is a maintenance number and cut 100 calories per day from that. Try that for a month and see where you are.
Our bodies are designed to lose weight in a calorie deficit. But the calculators have limits. They are based on statistics and averages. But no one is exactly average. Add to that the fact that there are always counting gray areas and we are left with an imprecise system. Buts it’s all we’ve got. It all gets down to trial and error.
Keep trying. There is a long calorie counting learning curve. You will figure this out.4 -
Don't get in your own way. There is a logical reason why you're stuck. It could be just a simple tweak you need to make to get losing again. You could be eating 100 calories too much a day. Something as simple as one little thing you're eating. Also,. if you've lost a good amount. you're body could just be taking a break and adjusting. Losing weight is automatic.. it takes time..
Don't self destruct and feel like giving up. That's the devil on your shoulder. You can do this!1 -
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crystalbluewolf13 wrote: »
No you aren’t as you said above that you don’t use a food scale. Measure half a cup of oatmeal for example in a measuring cup, then weigh that same half cup (I tried this experiment this morning as an FYI), my “1/2 cup” measured was a serving and a half instead of the serving it was supposed to be.
Weigh with a food scale, it will be eye opening!1 -
Get a bigger wrench. Sometimes taking a torch to it and heating it up will help too.2
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Dogmom1978 wrote: »crystalbluewolf13 wrote: »
No you aren’t as you said above that you don’t use a food scale. Measure half a cup of oatmeal for example in a measuring cup, then weigh that same half cup (I tried this experiment this morning as an FYI), my “1/2 cup” measured was a serving and a half instead of the serving it was supposed to be.
Weigh with a food scale, it will be eye opening!
I do use a food scale. I measure everything INCLUDING the measuring cups and they are generally the same and if not I account for this when I add them to my diary1 -
So if I use a 125ml measuring cup for milk for cereal and it weighs as less or more then that's the number I put in the diary not the cup. I use it as an estimate not the final figure1
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That seems like more work than it’s worth. I would just put the bowl on the scale and pour my milk in, but I want less dishes to clean 😜
Either your tracking is off somewhere (make your diary public and we can help see if we spot common errors), you are overestimating exercise calories (ex: I’ve seen people say they burned 800 calories during 45 min exercise; highly unlikely unless your at or close to elite athlete who can go full on for the entire duration) or you have your activity level set wrong (ex: lightly active when you are actually sedentary).1 -
Dogmom1978 wrote: »That seems like more work than it’s worth. I would just put the bowl on the scale and pour my milk in, but I want less dishes to clean 😜
Either your tracking is off somewhere (make your diary public and we can help see if we spot common errors), you are overestimating exercise calories (ex: I’ve seen people say they burned 800 calories during 45 min exercise; highly unlikely unless your at or close to elite athlete who can go full on for the entire duration) or you have your activity level set wrong (ex: lightly active when you are actually sedentary).
I did an experiment over the weekend. For the past few weeks I've been eating under 1,900 calories (1,300-1,800) and loosing nothing. So I ate up to or over 1,900 calories this weekend and I've lost 2lb this morning3 -
crystalbluewolf13 wrote: »Dogmom1978 wrote: »That seems like more work than it’s worth. I would just put the bowl on the scale and pour my milk in, but I want less dishes to clean 😜
Either your tracking is off somewhere (make your diary public and we can help see if we spot common errors), you are overestimating exercise calories (ex: I’ve seen people say they burned 800 calories during 45 min exercise; highly unlikely unless your at or close to elite athlete who can go full on for the entire duration) or you have your activity level set wrong (ex: lightly active when you are actually sedentary).
I did an experiment over the weekend. For the past few weeks I've been eating under 1,900 calories (1,300-1,800) and loosing nothing. So I ate up to or over 1,900 calories this weekend and I've lost 2lb this morning
That's anecdotal, not an experiment.
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crystalbluewolf13 wrote: »Dogmom1978 wrote: »That seems like more work than it’s worth. I would just put the bowl on the scale and pour my milk in, but I want less dishes to clean 😜
Either your tracking is off somewhere (make your diary public and we can help see if we spot common errors), you are overestimating exercise calories (ex: I’ve seen people say they burned 800 calories during 45 min exercise; highly unlikely unless your at or close to elite athlete who can go full on for the entire duration) or you have your activity level set wrong (ex: lightly active when you are actually sedentary).
I did an experiment over the weekend. For the past few weeks I've been eating under 1,900 calories (1,300-1,800) and loosing nothing. So I ate up to or over 1,900 calories this weekend and I've lost 2lb this morning
So, you likely lost water or poop weight. Bowel movement can be triggered by eating more fat. And some people are also whooshers: they eat at a deficit for a week or two and nothing seems to happen because they hold more onto water. And then suddenly they constantly run to the loo and finally notice their weight loss. Rinse and repeat.3 -
You have to really measure your food and portion until you get the hang of it- then even still maybe. And 1900 cals is A Lot2
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I don’t really understand how you got to 1900 calories. It doesn’t sound like what MyFitnessPal would suggest. Have you tried what it recommends yet?0
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Good morning! First of all, CrystalBlueWolf13, you're doing a great job as you continue to fight for your health. As a registered dietitian who also struggles with fat and weight loss, I can relate to your frustration.
The only advice I would give is to try to keep your carbohydrate intake to ~100-150 g per day while increasing your protein and fat intake to make up for the percentage of carbs reduced. Try that for about 2 weeks while continuing all the great habits you've started. Hopefully that will jump start your weight loss again.
Also, aim to eat non starchy vegetables during 3 meals; using the MyPlate method, try to have the vegetables make up half of your plate.
Good luck! You can do it.5 -
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