Weight loss slowing down
thehappinesspig
Posts: 12 Member
Hey! I was losing like 2 pounds a week and got down 15 pounds! Now it’s slowing down - I’m at a large calorie deficit not really on purpose, I’m just hitting less than my goal because it’s summer and I’m doing a lot of physical activity. The last two weeks I lost nothing. Overate one day and I went down a pound? What is going on? Does this make sense to anyone?
2
Replies
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Aggressive calorie deficit is a stressor, especially after it's been going on for a while.
Stress can cause water retention.
Water retention masks fat loss on the scale.
Over-eating eases the physical stress of the aggressive calorie deficit temporarily.
Reduced stress causes water weight drop.
Scale goes down a bit.
It's one theory.
Are you well over 200 pounds, and with at least 50 pounds or thereabouts to lose? If so, losing 2 pounds a week for a while could be fine. If not, it may not be the ideal thing, from the standpoint of health risk and sustainability.5 -
2lbs a week is a significant rate of loss. Your weight will fluctuate, go with overall trends you see in your weight ins from week to week. This is why I weigh every morning, so it's a more consistent measurement and I can see the overall way it's trending bc there's always a weird day here and there.0
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@allie_00p im not well over 200 pounds but I’m close to it, yes, and I’m not worried my weight loss is unhealthy. It’s happened easily and comfortably. But that’s a good theory - that may be it. It’s just frustrating having to eat more than I’m actually hungry for to avoid my body going into starvation mode.1
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@allie_00p i also weigh every day. It’s just an average. Some weeks it’s even more, and some weeks it’s much less. I lost 15 pounds in 2.5 months I think? That’s a little less than 2 pounds a week, I guess, more like 1.5. No cause for concern.1
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You need a more realistic outlook on weight loss. It will not be linear.4
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@Chef_Barbell asking a question means I am not realistic?1
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Have you updated your calorie goal lately? As you lose weight, the same amount of activity will burn fewer calories. Your calorie goal should be lowered accordingly.0
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thehappinesspig wrote: »@Chef_Barbell asking a question means I am not realistic?
No your responses are... weight loss is not linear. Patience will be your best ally.4 -
@Chef_Barbell my response that yes, I am almost 200 pounds and her theory sounds probable to me? Ok1
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thehappinesspig wrote: »@Chef_Barbell my response that yes, I am almost 200 pounds and her theory sounds probable to me? Ok
I think it's more that the question itself indicates you may have unrealistic expectations for how quickly you should be losing weight. You appear to have expected that your 2 pound per week weight loss would continue. It's common for weight loss to slow down after the initial phase. About 1 pound a week would be a reasonable expectation. And once you only have, say, 50 pounds left to lose, half a pound per week would probably be reasonable.6 -
Regarding the comment about being realistic: they mean that the scale will not show a weight loss each time, simply because of water weight fluctuations. You can do all the 'right' things, lose weight steadily over time, but sometimes the scale will show a higher # than the last time because of water weight. That is ok. Understanding that, and accepting that the scale is not a great indicator of progress in the short term helps you to be realistic about how weight loss works.
If you are consistently eating at a deficit, you should weigh less now than you did a month ago. If the scale from one week to the next (or one day to the next) does not show a decline, look back further to see if your trend is downward over a longer period of time. If so, then you are good. Though from time to time, also evaluate how you feel in terms of energy/satiety and assess if you need to change your calorie goal or focus on more nutrition based on how you feel.3 -
@nanastaci2020 thank you!2
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@sollyn23l2 i was asking a question, that’s all if I know what to expect, I’m happy.2
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thehappinesspig wrote: »@sollyn23l2 i was asking a question, that’s all if I know what to expect, I’m happy.
Good luck 👍0 -
Couple of possibilities. People presume losing weight to be a linear process, and it's not. It is normal to have more rapid weight loss in the beginning as we lose a significant amount of water weight early on as well as losing inherent digestive contents eating less. It varies by individual, but 4-6 weeks is typically the norm for more rapid and more linear weight loss...after that it slows down because actual fat loss is pretty slow. Here is what losing weight looks like in reality over time...
Possibility two as has been mentioned, an aggressive calorie deficit coupled with lots of activity and/or exercise is a huge stress on the body and raises cortisol levels which can inhibit weight loss and cause further water retention.1 -
@cwolfman13 thanks!0
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