Why is it harder to lose 10-20 lbs than 50+ lbs?
voguehoe
Posts: 1 Member
Does it ever feel like you are alone in the middle with needing to lose 10-20 lbs but most weight loss advice/tips are geared towards people looking to lose way more than that? I am definitely eating at a calorie deficit and have been for over a month (1500 cals, working out 3x a week + walking when possible) and have not dropped a single pound. Honestly losing the motivation at this point by seeing that I haven't made any progress at all. Ugh!
Sometimes it feels like I only ever see online content about people who dropped like 100+ lbs by making life style changes like cutting back on soda and chips, making meals at home and starting exercise; but I don't even eat those foods, I cook most of the time and try to work out during a busy week--and it's still not helping. Anyone else in the same boat? How are you staying motivated? Anyone got over this plateau? Please share your stories!
Sometimes it feels like I only ever see online content about people who dropped like 100+ lbs by making life style changes like cutting back on soda and chips, making meals at home and starting exercise; but I don't even eat those foods, I cook most of the time and try to work out during a busy week--and it's still not helping. Anyone else in the same boat? How are you staying motivated? Anyone got over this plateau? Please share your stories!
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Does it ever feel like you are alone in the middle with needing to lose 10-20 lbs but most weight loss advice/tips are geared towards people looking to lose way more than that? I am definitely eating at a calorie deficit and have been for over a month (1500 cals, working out 3x a week + walking when possible) and have not dropped a single pound. Honestly losing the motivation at this point by seeing that I haven't made any progress at all. Ugh!
Sometimes it feels like I only ever see online content about people who dropped like 100+ lbs by making life style changes like cutting back on soda and chips, making meals at home and starting exercise; but I don't even eat those foods, I cook most of the time and try to work out during a busy week--and it's still not helping. Anyone else in the same boat? How are you staying motivated? Anyone got over this plateau? Please share your stories!
I've always felt like most weight loss advice is geared towards people trying to lose a few vanity pounds. However, the same advice goes for both, so... 🤷♀️4 -
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The more fat you have the more the body is agreeable to lose some. As you lean out, the body wants to limit loss due to survival mechanisms. As you get lighter the less energy required to move around so your calorie needs become lower so as you do get lighter you need to be lowering calories and\or doing more activity to compensate for the lower weight.
People expect to lose fat at X calories and continue eating X calories and expect the loss to continue and this won't happen unless you started with a very big calorie deficit.
No loss=no deficit.6 -
Does it ever feel like you are alone in the middle with needing to lose 10-20 lbs but most weight loss advice/tips are geared towards people looking to lose way more than that?
The methods are pretty much identical no matter how much weight needs to be lost, with the exception (IMO) that it makes sense to lose more slowly when only a smaller amount to lose.I am definitely eating at a calorie deficit and have been for over a month (1500 cals, working out 3x a week + walking when possible) and have not dropped a single pound. Honestly losing the motivation at this point by seeing that I haven't made any progress at all. Ugh!
It's possible for water retention from new exercise to mask fat loss on the scale for a surprisingly long time, but you're reaching a point where that's a more tenuous possibility. If you've gone a whole menstrual cycle (if you have those) or 4-6 weeks, without loss, that's a less likely explanation of literally zero loss.
The more probable explanations (i.e., statistically likely among large groups of people who mention this outcome) are uncounted cheat days, food logging errors, overestimating exercise calories or activity level. None of those are a diss or personal criticism. There's a lot of mythology published about cheat days, no surprise that people believe it. Food logging is a surprisingly subtle skill, and most of us who've done it for a while have had quite a few face-palm moments when we realized where some major calories were slipping through the cracks. Exercise and activity level estimates commonly need some adjustments based on personal weight loss results (expected loss vs. actual loss).Sometimes it feels like I only ever see online content about people who dropped like 100+ lbs by making life style changes like cutting back on soda and chips, making meals at home and starting exercise; but I don't even eat those foods, I cook most of the time and try to work out during a busy week--and it's still not helping.
Those stories are more dramatic, make better click-bait. Realistically, who wants to read a story whose premise is "Susie lost 8 pounds in 3 months by planning meals a little better and taking a nice walk at lunch hour"? Booooorrrrriiiinggg.Anyone else in the same boat? How are you staying motivated? Anyone got over this plateau? Please share your stories!
While I agree with Tom up there about the subjective effects of body push-back when getting really lean, there's more in the picture.
I'm not in your boat, but I've (re-)lost around 10 pounds in maintenance after major loss, intentionally very slowly. It was almost painless, but required patient persistence. Key elements were solid food logging experience (I'd been doing it for several years by then), calorie goals personalized based on real-world loss/maintenance experience, and a weight-trending app. (Though even the weight trending app thought I was maintaining or even gaining for a month during the process, when I was sure that wasn't true. I was right - the scale suddenly dropped by the expected amount.)
I think it's normal for us to feel that no one is doing what we're doing, has done what we're doing; that something about our personal path is harder (because we feel it so viscerally), etc. It isn't easy every second for anyone. What's important IMO is to focus on what can be done to make progress. The only productive reason to think about obstacles is to figure out how to get over, around, through or otherwise past them.
In your case, one option is simply to adjust your calorie goal downward another 100-200 calories, and stick with it for another month, see if that helps.
Or, you could work on fine-tuning logging accuracy. If you're not using a food scale, consider doing that. Avoid using database entries that are whole-dish things that someone else made (meat lasagna, ham sandwich kind of thing). When you need to estimate by choosing from the database without full information, choose middling to high estimates, not the lowest one. Finally - as an offer, not an order - if you open your MFP diary, some of the "old hands" may be willing to take a look and see if anything jumps out.
There are other things that can be done, but that's enough for now. People will tell you things like "shock your body by switching exercise" "adopt this restrictive or named diet" and that sort of thing. That's mostly folklore: If it works, it's more coincidence than magic.
Best wishes!10 -
All the above. Explanations and encouragement.
I'm just going to add the obvious, Don't quit. Plateaus are aggravating but they don't last forever.
Wishing you success. 👍
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All the above. Explanations and encouragement.
I'm just going to add the obvious, Don't quit. Plateaus are aggravating but they don't last forever.
Wishing you success. 👍
They last forever if there is no deficit. After a month with no loss it's time to think about making dietary changes that allow for fewer weekly calories3 -
With only 5 lb to lose (vanity), my maintenance cals are 1600 on non exercise days. Total bummer and makes creating a deficit more difficult! I wonder if you are in a similar boat?0
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I thought I wanted to lose about 6lbs (vanity) and could only shift the same 2 then regain then lose etc. So I re-evaluated things and thought actually it was more about body composition than the actual weight. The longer I've stuck with the gym the happier I've become with that. My weight still fluctuates around those 2lbs but I can see differences, maybe focus on those kinds of changes for a bit to take your mind off the plateau6
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I had 20 pounds to lose and I lost them. Weight loss takes focus and determination for all of us. Our brothers and sisters who have 100+ pounds to lose do not have it any easier and surely wish they had only 20 to take off. So let’s not direct our frustration in the wrong direction.
As Ann mentioned above, it’s no criticism to consider any of the common things that may be in the way of weight loss. I have made logging errors, overestimated exercise, underestimated calories, and also felt pretty deprived while feeling like I was going nowhere at times.
The difference between people who lose the weight and those who don’t is whether they are able and willing to work through the frustration, take the emotion out of it, and readjust whatever is needed to be readjusted.
Here’s my encouragement to stick with it and figure it out! You can do it!3 -
Having lost 100 myself, I’d just like to point out, everyone has that last 10-20, whether you need to lose 10 or a hundred.
Same rules apply.
Ye gods, be grateful you only have 10-20 to lose!
There’s a lot of folks out here who’d fall on their knees in thanks that was only the case.6 -
laurachambers86 wrote: »I thought I wanted to lose about 6lbs (vanity) and could only shift the same 2 then regain then lose etc. So I re-evaluated things and thought actually it was more about body composition than the actual weight. The longer I've stuck with the gym the happier I've become with that. My weight still fluctuates around those 2lbs but I can see differences, maybe focus on those kinds of changes for a bit to take your mind off the plateau
With being only a couple lbs from your goal is one thing however when you're still a ways away then yes a plateau is something you need to deal with.
You can look at an honest to goodness plateau as a good thing. It means you’ve had a diet break and now it’s time to drop down one more click on the calorie dial0 -
I had 10 kg to lose (about 22 lb) - followed same general advice as anyone else and lost it over 10 months0
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Yes the last 10 pounds can take a long time. I feel you because I’m wanting to drop 10 myself and have tried several times. Having long maintenance breaks helps me. So I do 6 weeks in a deficit then a month at maintenance. It feels like it’s taking forever but if I look at my happy scale entries, the line is trending down slightly month to month.1
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I’m trying to lose the last 5 - 10 pounds. It may seem like a little but I’m only 5 ft so it looks hefty on me. I thought I wasn’t eating much, as I was only eating breakfast and lunch and no fast food or sugar ever, however when I started logging really strictly ( every ingredient for every meal, no guessing) it turns out I was over eating by about 200 calories a day which adds up. What is helping me is NOT eating back my exercise calories ( I exercise almost every day) and counting the calories in nuts and olive oil. I fell for the lie that you can eat nuts and olive oil and not gain weight ( saw some studies that claimed this and believed them). Maybe some people can, but not me … I’m counting them now and losing the weight slowly.2
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Does it ever feel like you are alone in the middle with needing to lose 10-20 lbs but most weight loss advice/tips are geared towards people looking to lose way more than that? I am definitely eating at a calorie deficit and have been for over a month (1500 cals, working out 3x a week + walking when possible) and have not dropped a single pound. Honestly losing the motivation at this point by seeing that I haven't made any progress at all. Ugh!
Sometimes it feels like I only ever see online content about people who dropped like 100+ lbs by making life style changes like cutting back on soda and chips, making meals at home and starting exercise; but I don't even eat those foods, I cook most of the time and try to work out during a busy week--and it's still not helping. Anyone else in the same boat? How are you staying motivated? Anyone got over this plateau? Please share your stories!
There are mistakes that people commonly make that cause them to not lose weight that we might be able to spot if you change your Diary Sharing settings to Public. In the app, go to Settings > Diary Setting > Diary Sharing > and check Public. Desktop: http://www.myfitnesspal.com/account/diary_settings
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It's harder to lose the last 10-20 lbs because there's just not as much cushion if I accidentally underestimate calories or overestimate exercise. The logging has to be so tight it squeals. The willpower to say no to the second Krackel or Mr. Goodbar has to be iron-strong. The exercise gets tiring and can be hard to continually fit into the schedule. The discipline muscle can get worn out after so long, especially when you'd just like to enjoy a vacation or take it easy after an illness.
I'm back here to lost ~10-15 lbs. A few things have helped me in the past: be OK with losing 1-2 lbs per month instead of a more aggressive rate, find really low calorie snacks that fill you up like sliced cucumbers or hard-boiled egg whites, make excuses to get even more steps by parking further away or randomly inspecting the garden in your backyard, possibly stop counting steps and only count formal exercise so that the steps give you some cushion in case you overeat, where possible trade low-cal options for traditional ones (as long as taste is not sacrificed!), get a dog to walk or volunteer to walk dogs at a shelter, learn to be satisfied with 1 or 2 bites of a high cal food (and honestly, the pleasure factor goes down after about 3 bites anyway). It's not easy; when you've only got a bit to go, you're not whacking away at the wood, you just whittling it into shape little by little.0 -
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At one point during my weight loss journey, my weight remained unchanging for three weeks, but I lost almost 3 inches off my waist. Be sure to measure more than just weight, because you may have made significant progress somewhere else. Possible measurements include waist, arm/thigh, bustline, weight, blood pressure, cholesterol levels, heart rate, quality of sleep, overall energy level...1
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