The Weird and Highly Annoying World of Scale Fluctuations
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Does anyone else play the weigh game where you weight yourself before and after potty? I am amazed at how much human waste can truly weigh ...11
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rhtexasgal wrote: »Does anyone else play the weigh game where you weight yourself before and after potty? I am amazed at how much human waste can truly weigh ...
Yep. I have been known to lose a kg in a single wee!4 -
Lillymoo01 wrote: »rhtexasgal wrote: »Does anyone else play the weigh game where you weight yourself before and after potty? I am amazed at how much human waste can truly weigh ...
Yep. I have been known to lose a kg in a single wee!
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Oh man! I needed this today. Thank you!4
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My own weight fluctuations, from Day 10 (first day I could get a 10-day moving average) to Day 41 (today). The initial slope is high because I lost a lot of water weight on Days 1-9.
Purple diamonds are scale readings, blue circles are my 10-day moving average, gray dotted line is the slope you'd see if I lost exactly 1 pound per week.
(from my own Numbers spreadsheet, exported via screenshot)
I really kind of like the "boingy-boingy" parts - they're fun!
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I get too wrapped up in scale weight, i feel sometimes ive been doing so well but then step on the scales and bang ...up, ruined.this makes sense now , still need to get my head round it and even thnking of giving up weighing myself.4
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Good thread this and very useful.
Right now I also have an additional factor. We're in an evacuation apartment as we are having, while were have renovations in our place (1 year so far). The tiles in the bathroom floor are completely uneven meaning moving the scale even a cm or so will make the reading vary by up to 2kgs.
I can't even just leave it in the same place as the bathrooms so small (even by European standards) its completely in the way.
Oh well first world problems.6 -
Dealing with perimenopausal symptoms for quite a long time now, I have peaks and valleys when it comes to my weight, regardless of how accurate I log my food and underestimate my exercise calories to give myself a buffer zone. I was weighing myself frequently and for 1.5 months, I was 10 pounds higher than what my logging "should" indicate. Then, literally overnight, almost 12 pounds were gone! I got to enjoy that "lighter" feeling for about a week and then bam! literally overnight, here comes 11 pounds back again and I keep it and keep it and keep it and then about 2 months later, I lose it again, literally overnight!
So, I have stopped weighing myself ... I just don't want to know right now. I still track my food and exercise but nope - can't weigh in. I don't need to deal with that mental game. For now, I just go by how my clothes fit and so far, I have not had to buy new clothes. In the veeeeerrrrryyyyy long run, I am likely losing a little weight and maybe fat but it is so hard to really tell thanks to those pesky hormones. I figure if I can keep wearing my clothes without busting buttons and seams, I am doing ok.6 -
Hormones really stink with the weight bouncing around. It wasn’t a big thing 3-5 years ago, but now that I’ve crossed into the late 30s....bah. I can be up and down 4-5lbs a day, then hang at the same weight forever, despite assuming no calories burned for lifting, conservatively logging cardio, and eating on target.
I know the day of reckoning will come and the scale will reflect the effort, but it’s tough to wait it out when the last time I tried to lose it was far more linear and consistent (consistent small losses—.5lbs a week instead of wait wait wait lose 3-5lbs).1 -
Amazing article thanks for posting and bumping!!
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Looks like this could use a bump since we're seeing so many threads about it0
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Bump, bump, bump.2
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A couple of days of salty foods + a new bit of exercise leaving me sore + stupid perimenopausal hormones = scale shenanigans
Man, I really needed this thread today.2 -
I'll add a tl;dr, especially for women (from the OP's article):
1) Weigh daily; record weekly average
2) DON'T watch weekly average fluctuations... watch MONTHLY fluctuations at an "anchor week" (i.e. the week you start your period)
3) Don't want to do the math yourself? Use something like trendweight.com or happyscale.2 -
What I did when I was losing a large amount of weight years ago was that I only logged my lowest weight for the month, so I would log a number at the first of the month, and then if a lower number came along, I would log that and delete the previous one, and so on and so on for every month.
Weight can fluctuate up a lot, but it can only fluctuate down so far, so this floor weight was most accurate of my fat loss rate.
I watched the graph of those lowest weights, and the graph was a very clear, very consistent slope downward over time with plateaus around Christmas and my summer vacation when I would eat and drink more.
For 4 years, as long as I was consistent, the slope of the graph was a smooth curve down.
I now log every day, but I only pay attention to the slope of the lowest points on the graph, that tells me over time my actual loss rate.
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What I did when I was losing a large amount of weight years ago was that I only logged my lowest weight for the month, so I would log a number at the first of the month, and then if a lower number came along, I would log that and delete the previous one, and so on and so on for every month.
Weight can fluctuate up a lot, but it can only fluctuate down so far, so this floor weight was most accurate of my fat loss rate.
I watched the graph of those lowest weights, and the graph was a very clear, very consistent slope downward over time with plateaus around Christmas and my summer vacation when I would eat and drink more.
For 4 years, as long as I was consistent, the slope of the graph was a smooth curve down.
I now log every day, but I only pay attention to the slope of the lowest points on the graph, that tells me over time my actual loss rate.
I don't know why you got multiple disagrees. I admit, it could be slow to reveal non-loss in some scenarios, but if loss is happening it's a reasonably viable approach, IMO. I personally wouldn't do it (I'm a data geek, log every AM weight in my weight trending app, but when I used to update weight on MFP during loss I'd just put in new lows here, not every blip that was in Libra.)1 -
I don't know why you got multiple disagrees. I admit, it could be slow to reveal non-loss in some scenarios, but if loss is happening it's a reasonably viable approach, IMO. I personally wouldn't do it (I'm a data geek, log every AM weight in my weight trending app, but when I used to update weight on MFP during loss I'd just put in new lows here, not every blip that was in Libra.)
*Shrug*
No one can actually disagree with facts of what I did. It's a fact, it's what I did. I'm not saying anyone else has to do it, I just shared what *I* did.
The benefit of it, for me, was that it really clarified weight loss for me. I was very consistent with my routine, and the scale was all over the place, but the graph of the lowest weights was always predictable.
Every month, like clockwork, the lowest weight was always 2lbs less than the lowest weight of the previous month. For 36 months straight, except for any month with a vacation in it where there was no loss. After 36 months, it steadily slowed, but was still consistent.
This really helped demystify my plateaus as well. Because I might see my lowest weight for the month in the first few days from a whoosh, and then not see my lowest weight the next month until near the end.
Before I would be frustrated with a 6 week plateau, but with this tracking, it became clear that regardless of the timing, unless I ate more than normal, that at some point in the month, there would be a low weight 2lbs lower than the previous month.
The dates of the low weights were highly irregular, but consistently there, and consistently almost exactly 2lbs lower.
This allowed me to see that what I had always seen as plateaus was actually still the exact same steady rate of loss, just not showing up clearly in shorter timelines.
The longer timeline graph proved to me without a shadow of a doubt that when I'm consistent, so is my weight loss.
This is my story, this is my personal experience.
If anyone finds it helpful, cool, if not, feel free to ignore it.
I personally didn't have a weight loss goal at the time. I was obese and didn't want to focus on weight loss, I wanted to focus on a sustainable, long-term lifestyle, and I told myself that whatever weight I ended up at while living that healthy lifestyle is what I would accept.
So I never set up this system to try and hit a goal, I set it up to try and observe the long-term results of the lifestyle I had chosen.
That's why I was so patient. What I was doing was forever. But again, that's just what worked for me.17 -
This is a really interesting thread, and the timing of it couldn't be better for me. Thank you everybody, especially those who posted graphs and apps for trending analysis. I'm a geek for data, and since I braved stepping on the scale this year for the first time in several years, I'm enjoying weighing often and in the whole not having drama about fluctuations. I recently found out that my scales were all over the place in my bedroom carpet, so have moved to the bathroom, which has "caused" a 5 kg gain. Never mind, it's not a real gain, i know I'm in calorie defecit and at least I'm getting a more reliable read there.
My hormones are a challenge with IR and irregular periods as well as mystery menhorragia, all of which probably contribute to fluctuating weight. But my general trend over the course of this year is that I'm 10kg down, and I'm happy about that as it seems very sustainable to me.1 -
I recently figured out that I carried 4kg (about 10 lbs) of water weight from exercising a lot and the stress of a deficit, even though it was fairly moderate (0,5kg/1.1lb a week). My period comes with about 1,5kg/3.3lbs of water weight. Maddening1
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Maddening is right! I can gain 3.5 pounds overnight. Obviously that's water weight, but do I ever LOSE 3.5 pounds overnight? of course not!2
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@AnnPT77
Cool thanks0 -
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