Frustrated and researched out!

Hi, I'm not new to MFP but first time posting. Since January of this year I've been tracking consistently with food.

I wear a Garmin which tracks my daily calorie burn at 2,000 a day usually. I walk 5 days a week for 30 minutes (2x15 minutes a day). On top of that I usually do 3-4 workouts which are made up of strength training (dumbbells and bodyweight exercises) and also some HIIT/cardio. I do some yoga too.

I have a sedentary job but not a sedentary lifestyle and make sure to move around during the work day.

I track all food in MFP and mainly eat reasonably healthily. Greek yogurt and fruit or granola for breakfast, often trying to add in protein at lunch so sardines or beans on wholemeal toast. Dinner I often have less control over but is usually vegetable based with little meat. I do comfort eat at times but everything is logged. Every biscuit every chocolate bar.

So I'd say I've fairly consistent in hitting around 1,687 for quite a while. This should be a deficit of 300+ calories a day (I'm usually hitting 2,300ish burnt on a workout day). Although weight loss would be slow with this, all I've read suggests it would happen.

But I'm losing nothing. I have a scale that calculates percentage fat and that doesn't change either. I took body measurements and have lost some cm but no weight loss whatsoever.

I'm 40 so I know getting older will affect it but how can my weight be so static? For clarity I'm BMI 23.9. I'm bigger than I used to be and want to lose around 10 pounds.

Can anyone help? It's really getting me down.

Replies

  • Xellercin
    Xellercin Posts: 924 Member
    Well, how long have you been doing this?

    The best thing you can do is measure *precisely* and weigh daily for at least 6 weeks and then reassess from there what is happening.

    If your weight stays stable, then you know you need to cut a bit more in order to see a loss.

    You need to be consistent for a good length of time to really determine what you need to do.
  • sollyn23l2
    sollyn23l2 Posts: 1,755 Member
    Xellercin wrote: »
    Well, how long have you been doing this?

    The best thing you can do is measure *precisely* and weigh daily for at least 6 weeks and then reassess from there what is happening.

    If your weight stays stable, then you know you need to cut a bit more in order to see a loss.

    You need to be consistent for a good length of time to really determine what you need to do.

    Yep, exactly this. Every body is different. And you have to look at what your own body is doing to see what may need to be adjusted.
  • Dianedoessmiles1
    Dianedoessmiles1 Posts: 13,983 Member
    edited June 2022
    I get this!! I was also frustrated by own stall/gain though I hadn't really changed anything. I belonged to the 2022 Spring 5% Challenge. I Had written a blog in regard to my frustration and also posted on the team chats. I did get help I needed. I needed to be honest with myself (I'm SURE YOU ARE!) we did a weekly challenge of understanding our BMR. That helped me some, but than a member talked about the calories we need along with the BMR and TADA suddenly it took hold for me!! I lost just over 7 lbs in 8 weeks, when I hadn't been losing anything since the fall.

    If you'd like some more support with a group/team of people come and check us out on the 2022 Summer 5% Challenge right here on MFP. We will soon be starting the challenge. It's a great time to join us. We work on healthy habits (LTGL - Living The Good Life) and exercise, we wish for all to start at their current level of exercise, and yours is already GREAT!! We support each other, care about each other.

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    https://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/group/143186-2022-summer-5-challenge-community

    Love to have you join us and anyone else who wishes to also!

    AFTER you JOIN PLEASE PICK one of the teams to join within the 5%.

    WOOHOO we are all looking forward to having FUN THIS SUMMER while taking care of ourselves.

  • Sjdgiraffe1920
    Sjdgiraffe1920 Posts: 3 Member
    Thanks for the replies. That's a good point about the Garmin possibly not being accurate. I do weigh my food and check the food details when I log to make sure the details are as the packet. If I don't know calories I generally try to overestimate. But I get the point that there could be inaccuracies creeping in. I guess I hoped that if on average it wasn't going too high I would still get somewhere.

    I've been tracking since February. I started on a lower more extreme goal doing a week or so of 1,200 but then realised I wanted more sustainable loss and not to obsess with food.

    Online calculators put my bmr at around 1,630 if I put in sedentary. I don't eat more if I exercise more, I don't enter my fitness data into MFP.

    I've had a couple of weeks when I ate more but didn't really put on weight either.

    I guess I'll have to just increase the deficit for a week or six by cutting my intake down more or perhaps trying to fit in some extra exercise and see if it shifts anything. I know I'm fitter than I've ever been so the extra fat I'm carrying is disheartening.
  • AnnPT77
    AnnPT77 Posts: 34,225 Member
    Thanks for the replies. That's a good point about the Garmin possibly not being accurate. I do weigh my food and check the food details when I log to make sure the details are as the packet. If I don't know calories I generally try to overestimate. But I get the point that there could be inaccuracies creeping in. I guess I hoped that if on average it wasn't going too high I would still get somewhere.

    I've been tracking since February. I started on a lower more extreme goal doing a week or so of 1,200 but then realised I wanted more sustainable loss and not to obsess with food.

    Online calculators put my bmr at around 1,630 if I put in sedentary. I don't eat more if I exercise more, I don't enter my fitness data into MFP.

    I think something is still unclear. BMR is the number of calories you'd burn in a coma, motionless, basically. Your BMR is the same if sedentary or active. Your TDEE (total daily energy expenditure) is the number of calories you'd burn doing everything that you do (job, chores, exercise, etc.) in addition to the BMR. (The goal MFP gives you is neither BMR nor TDEE.)

    So, if your BMR is estimated at 1630, eating 1200 calories but not adding exercise could be quite an aggressive deficit. A very aggressive deficit (fast loss target) could lead to unexpected stress-related water retention (distorting scale results) or fatigue (reducing TDEE below estimates).

    On the other hand, if your estimated sedentary TDEE is 1630, eating 1200 might be OK, though not eating back any calories for exercise could still introduce confounding variables.

    I'm not sure, given the above explanation, what 1630 is: Really your BMR? If so, fairly meaningless in determining weight loss rate. TDEE if sedentary (which you aren't), then only slightly more relevant.


    I've had a couple of weeks when I ate more but didn't really put on weight either.

    I guess I'll have to just increase the deficit for a week or six by cutting my intake down more or perhaps trying to fit in some extra exercise and see if it shifts anything. I know I'm fitter than I've ever been so the extra fat I'm carrying is disheartening.

    As an aside, my Garmin's all-day calorie estimate is 25-30% off, for me, as compared with nearly 7 years of calorie logging and weight management experience. This is rare, but IME possible. (In my case, Garmin guesses too low, however.)

    We might be able to give more nuanced advice if we knew more about you. Certainly, what you plan to try next (cut further, maybe more exercise) could be a reasonable thing after this long a period with no loss, if you prefer to try things experimentally rather than posting more.

    Either way, wishing you more satisfying progress soon!
  • Sjdgiraffe1920
    Sjdgiraffe1920 Posts: 3 Member
    Sorry. BMR is 1,320. TDEE for sedentary 1,630. Apologies I was rushing the post.
    That's useful to know about the Garmin.
  • Buff_Man
    Buff_Man Posts: 623 Member
    Try this https://www.bodybuilding.com/fun/macronutrients_calculator.htm
    It will give you a starting point. I'm 73kg, age 42 also working out 4x a week with 30k steps a week. I have been on about 1500 cals for 2 months and I've slowly lost 2 kg. For me it takes at least 2 weeks if being consistent to see any changes. At the same time my waist went down 1 inch. I know this is my level if I want to lose fat
    So, remember it's not just about weight. You might be putting on some muscle and losing fat at the same time. Keep measuring waist, chest, legs. If you can eat fewer calories without feeling starving and your weight is not dropping too fast > 1kg per week, then you should be ok.
    Also foods make a difference. Too many carbs retain fluids for me.
    Ignore the Garmin cals but focus on getting 10k steps a day and regular workouts
    Good luck!
  • Lietchi
    Lietchi Posts: 6,840 Member
    edited June 2022
    Buff_Man wrote: »
    Try this https://www.bodybuilding.com/fun/macronutrients_calculator.htm
    It will give you a starting point.

    For calorie amounts, a more nuanced calculator (more activity level choices) would be better IMHO, for example www.sailrabbit.com/bmr.
    But considering OP already has own data, that would be a much better basis for adjustment than another calculator.

    As for the macros suggested, the amount of protein is a bit excessive IMHO, 180gr for me (130lbs with the aim to lose weight).

    Aside from that, absolutely, focusing on other things like measurements instead of the scale can be helpful.
  • allaboutthecake
    allaboutthecake Posts: 1,535 Member
    I'll jump in.... I took a peak at your diary but its closed. So...without seeing what your macros are set at.... switch out starchy veggies to more leafy and 'solid' greens in your vegetable portions. Try high-fiber such as raspberries and blackberries in your fruit portions. In carb portion go for a higher fiber count such as Bob's Redmill 7 or 12 grain, steel cut oaks; (soaked.) Don't go over any one macro. In my own case, these small changes kick-started a stall I was in.
  • mapleleafmom
    mapleleafmom Posts: 33 Member
    This happened to me. Mega workouts, major cutting and no scale movement. Fully healthy as per my dr. Turns out I am insulin resistant. Intermittent Fasting, 8 hour eating window, 50g of carbs or less a day, is working. Finally. And I have energy and feel GOOD. When I was cutting I was exhausted!!!!!
  • kshama2001
    kshama2001 Posts: 28,052 Member
    With only 10 pounds to lose, weight loss can be excruciatingly slow.

    Are you using a weight trend app like Happy Scale (iPhone) or Libra (Android)?

    I lost almost 40 pounds last year (at age 54) and some weeks and even months it felt like I wasn't making any progress, but the report feature on Happy Scale showed that was not true.