the strangest scale thing happened today
trulyhealy
Posts: 242 Member
this isn’t really a question but i’m so confused cause last night i ate like 2,000 cals of junk food (i’m 5 foot 5 and 20 years old) and the scale went down this morning!!!!
i’m so happy bc i expected it to go up by like 2-3 pounds but it went down by 1 pound.
how could this happen tho?? i wasn’t in a calorie deficit. i did go to the gym for an hour but it was only weights not cardio
i’m so happy bc i expected it to go up by like 2-3 pounds but it went down by 1 pound.
how could this happen tho?? i wasn’t in a calorie deficit. i did go to the gym for an hour but it was only weights not cardio
1
Replies
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This happens to me pretty regularly - both in active losing and now in fairly recent maintenanceish. My best guess is that breaking a prolonged deficit prompts my body to drop water weight because cortisol levels go down. Happened to me every time I went to a maintenance break or just ate too much.2
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Fat loss/gain is a slow thing, and can easily be masked by short term fluctuations. Even if you ate 2000 calories above maintenance, that would only be just over half a lb of fat gain (theoretically).
The 2 or 3 lbs (or more) gained after a high calorie day is mostly extra food waste in the digestive tract and extra water weight from more carbs and/or a higher sodium intake. And sometimes, the body will release a lot of water weight after a high calorie day, and the scale will go down instead of up.
I've had it happen too, I also think it's the body feeling less stressed and not holding onto as much water weight.5 -
This is how I gained weight: Ate a bag of crisps. Next morning; Oh, I lost weight, cool! I can has more crisps! Wht the others said: something happens in the body when you eat at a surplus sometimes, either by releasing stored water or by promoting pooping. None of this is actual fat loss. It's temporary fluctuation.10
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I've seen similar things in myself. There may be something in that stress/cortisol/water weight idea, here.
I'd also observe that if there *is* body fat gain from a day or few of over-maintenance eating, it may not show up on the scale the very next day anyway.
Of course, the actual excess calories may not be enough to show up on the scale anyway, amongst routine daily fluctuations.
But even if it were going to show up, it's worth considering that full digestive transit can take 50+ hours (per research), with calories/nutrients being absorbed along the way, and metabolized via biochemical processes that can be fairly quick, but they're not instant. It's not like we add body fat as soon as the excess calories go in our mouth, or hit our stomach.
Food you ate last night is potentially still in the midst of being processed, by next morning's weigh-in, not fully digested/metabolized/stored.
Even so, 2000 calories shouldn't have a bit impact on body fat levels, even if 2000 above maintenance: Like @lietchi said, just over half a pound as a theoretical max, and there are physical responses that tend to whittle down that actual impact, maybe especially so from a rare episode.1 -
springlering62 wrote: »
Just imagine the implications: "crisps discovered as negative calorie food!"
😂😂
14 -
this happens to me all the time! I try to have a high calorie day every once and a while. It seems to boost my metabolism. I don’t know why it works but I think of it as “reminding” my body that I’m eating in a deficit.1
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Our bodies are still burning calories while we sleep, we cannot possibly keep track of ALL the metabolic processes that go on ALL the time, we can only make close estimates with a slight margin of error. I consider daily fluctuations between 1-5 pounds to be within that margin of error and don’t get too worked up about it. In my opinion anything after 5 pounds is when it really starts to count, but that is only my opinion/experience after 8 years of maintenance, YMMV5
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It's all crazy at times. I've had major weight loss within a couple days of huge food consumption myself. Don't let it freak you out, just accept that weight loss isn't linear. I've had swings over 10 pounds in a day when I'm real active and it's hot out, and it's not uncommon to see 4-5 pound swings on a given day.3
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Scale fluctuations are normal. What matters is the overall trend.
https://physiqonomics.com/the-weird-and-highly-annoying-world-of-scale-weight-and-fluctuations/1 -
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