maintaining... for now... tips

Hi,
I'm kind of new to maintenance. I have lost 100 lbs. I still have about 40-50 lbs more I would like to lose. It all depends how I feel when I get to that range.
But right now I need a break from being in a deficit. I was eating around 1200-1300 cal for the large part of 2 years. These days I'm trying to figure out my maintenance range for now. I've been aiming for around 2000 cal / day. I'm still having monthly binges that last 2-3 days during that time of the month, even with a higher daily calorie goal.
Any tips/tricks for that time of the month.
I'm also wondering if my daily maintenance should be a little higher because of these cravings/binges.
Advice would greatly be appreciated.
Thank you!

Replies

  • cmriverside
    cmriverside Posts: 34,458 Member
    If you still have 40-50 to go....

    1200 is really not meant to be a long-term thing.

    You're smart to take a diet break:
    https://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/discussion/10604863/of-refeeds-and-diet-breaks/p1


    There's no way to quickly establish your current needs, since you've been at such an aggressive deficit for two years.

    Read that thread I linked.


    Take it easy on yourself.

    After your diet break, come back and set your Goals at "Lose 1 pound per week," and be as honest as you can with the Activity Level setting.


    When you get in some purposeful exercise, eat more on those days.



    I lost almost all my 80 pounds lost on 1500 PLUS exercise calories. I'm older, retired, female, 5'7"-5'8" and not a lot of day to day activity in a tiny condo. Most days I was eating 1700-2000 calories to lose weight, including exercise calories,
  • work_again
    work_again Posts: 125 Member
    omg congrats!!!!!!! When I go into maintenance, at first I found it hard to even get all the calories every day :D But I started finding somethings that really worked (high protein def helped) - but also carved out the extra cals as like a treat... so like... froyo... or a reeeeeally good cheese on my salad grinnn.

    I now I realize i don't have the experience to answer your actual question hahahaha... but I am excited for you.

    Good luck!
  • ashmarie1083
    ashmarie1083 Posts: 55 Member
    My goal range would still even put me in the overweight BMI category, but I want to build some muscle if I can while at maintenance for a while.
    I'm also trying to figure out how long I want to hang out around maintenance before trying to lose more.
  • jeromelloydstockton
    jeromelloydstockton Posts: 2 Member
    Really, to me, what I am hearing is that you do need a break from dieting and you aren't sure how much of a break to take. I'm also hearing about that you feel that your current low energy intake is causing binging/cravings?

    First of all, well done!

    The amount of time you spend maintaining is up to you. Take as long as *you* need; if it's two weeks or two months, it doesn't matter. What really matters is you taking the required amount of time to feel "rested" to continue on your journey. What also does matter is that you don't set back yourself by gaining back most, or all the weight you have lost prior.

    As another member posted above about diet breaks and re-feeds - I haven't clicked the link but do have some experience/knowledge from personal experience, reading studies, my profession etc etc. Dieting breaks are a great *tool* for all the reasons above.

    Regarding building muscle. I am not sure what you current body composition or experience with muscle building is, so I'm going to assume you're completely new to it. The more muscle you have, the metabolically active your muscles and therefore body is; more muscle, more energy burned! Say you started a weight-training regime which you were consistent with, completing all the compounds lifts and seen fair improvements over a 3-month period. Then regardless if you're in a kcal deficit, surplus, or maintenance you're going to see some kind of results. Simply put, this is just the body's response early on, otherwise known as "newby gains". These effects fade after this point, meaning that you will have to focus more on nutrition and progressive overload in your training to pack on that muscle. As you may know, the body *optimally* builds muscle in a kcal surplus (something you don't want to be in with your current goals to lose body mass - specifically body fat). So, once you leave the "newby gains" phase then you may or may not want to focus on muscle-building and therefore a calorie surplus.

    Keep going, you're smashin' it!
  • Fflpnari
    Fflpnari Posts: 975 Member
    whats your height weight activity?? Chances are you can eat much more than 1200 and lose weight. If you take your calories from binges and the 1200 per day I wonder what they would average. Since youve lost 100lbs.


  • wunderkindking
    wunderkindking Posts: 1,615 Member
    I have done diet breaks for 2 weeks for every 5lbs lost. The best advice I can give you is to:
    a-) Try to use this time as a way of figuring out how to eat mostly healthy foods and meet that maintenance goal. The first couple I took were hard - because my deficit to start with was too big and then I had no idea how to get enough cals without going back to stuff like chips and candy. Weird, upside down, but a thing I really needed to learn.
    b-) Get your general goal up. Being overly aggressive makes the above harder.
    c-) Expect temporary scale weight to jump up due to more food in your system and water weight retention above and beyond usual because of things like more carbs and more salt.
  • dnlwilliams
    dnlwilliams Posts: 3 Member
    Congrats! But take it easy buddy. :)
  • Orphia
    Orphia Posts: 7,097 Member
    How long did it take you to lose your 100 lb? 2 years? I'm amazed you stuck to 1200 kcal for that long.

    Were you eating exercise calories on top of the the 1200? You should.