not losing weight!

I have been logging every single piece of food I eat- I am NOT allowing the app to add calories when I work out - meaning I am staying under the calorie count every day even though I work out and burn 400-600 calories almost every day (for example my calorie intake is 1800 if exercise were considered it would be 2200 but I stay under 1800 if that makes sense)- I hit the gym 5-6 days a week for lifting and HIIT. despite all this- I haven’t lost weight and have gained. HELP!! any ideas?? other than weight loss drugs??

Answers

  • Lietchi
    Lietchi Posts: 6,975 Member
    What's the timeline: days, weeks, months? If days or weeks: you need more patience - our bodyweight fluctuates due to many factors that have nothing to do with fat loss. And if your exercise is new, it is more than likely causing water retention for muscle repair (especially lifting) masking fat loss on the scale.
  • tomcustombuilder
    tomcustombuilder Posts: 2,307 Member
    If you've been at this calorie amount for less than four weeks You've got to give it some time. If at that point, you still haven't lost then your weekly calorie amount is too high and you're gonna have to lower it
  • mary001
    mary001 Posts: 2 Member
    My caloric intake goals are at 1200 calories. Sometimes I go over it. I always try to stay in a deficit with exercise. I have lost 50 pounds over the last 7 months
  • AnnPT77
    AnnPT77 Posts: 35,190 Member
    Weight loss drugs are unlikely to contribute anything useful in that scenario, except potential side effects. Generally, when they work, they reduce cravings and appetite, sometimes to such an extreme extent that people have to work at eating enough to sustain health. Since you're reporting being calorie compliant, how would that help you?

    I agree with others: If you've been at this routine for less than 4-6 weeks, or one whole menstrual cycle if you have those, then whether you're losing fat or not is still an open question.

    In particular, if a significant part of that pretty heavy exercise routine is new, plus you're eating pretty low calories and not fueling that exercise, you could have multiple pounds of added water retention for muscle repair; because of the physical stress on your body even beyond the exercise; and some contribution from the psychological stress I'm inferring from your post. (That's not intended as a criticism.)

    In addition, if the exercise is new and fatiguing (fatigue being more likely when under-fueling), then fatigue can subtly bleed calorie burn out of daily life because we drag through the day, resting more, moving less. That won't stop weight loss, but it can make it slower than the calorie-needs estimates would predict.

    Even fast fat loss is slow. 2 pounds a week of fat loss is about 4.6 ounces a day, just a bit over a quarter pound. By contrast, water retention fluctuates by multiple pounds per day, and so does waste in the digestive tract on its way to the exit. Though it's not the most common pattern, some women only see a new low weight once a month, at a certain point in their cycle, because hormonal water weight can be that weird. (And this can differ for an individual woman at different points in her life.)

    That means water/waste fluctuations can mask fat loss on the scale for up to several weeks.

    Water fluctuations are part of how a healthy body stays healthy. We don't want to try to mess with that. Understanding it is a better idea. This is a good read, especially the article linked in the first post:

    https://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/discussion/10683010/the-weird-and-highly-annoying-world-of-scale-fluctuations/p1

    Best wishes!

  • mosconec
    mosconec Posts: 1 Member
    Hi there, have you tried fasting while being in calorie deficit? This may help
  • totameafox
    totameafox Posts: 446 Member
    I would talk to your doctor if you have checked that you are logging everything correctly and have been doing this for a few months. My aunt tried many ways to lose weight over her life and it took getting her medical issues taken care of before she could lose weight.

    Since you are lifting weights you could try recording your measurements. Your body composition might change even if the scale does not. But I would mostly emphasize patience. Health is a life long journey that we have to add knowledge to along the way. It's ok if it takes us a little longer to get to the destination as long as we are staying on the road.
  • age_is_just_a_number
    age_is_just_a_number Posts: 645 Member
    How long have you been doing this?
    You may not be eating enough calories.
    I know that sounds counter-intuitive. But a small deficit over the long term will often yield better long term results.
  • patriciafoley1
    patriciafoley1 Posts: 204 Member
    I would cut your calorie intake to 1500. I am at 1200 and I run from 500-900 exercise calories, but I stay under 1500 on the days when I add a few exercise calories to my 1200. I'm 5'4" 162 pounds at present, 68 yo (reportedly a hard age to lose weight at) and I've lost about 40 pounds since October. You may actually have found your maintenance calorie intake. I would be leery of weight loss drugs. I have heard reports of people having their stomach paralyzed by them, even after they go off the drugs. Also reports are, those that go off them that don't paralyze their stomach can quickly regain the weight. So its a risk with a very short term reward, at least for some.
  • tomcustombuilder
    tomcustombuilder Posts: 2,307 Member
    mosconec wrote: »
    Hi there, have you tried fasting while being in calorie deficit? This may help
    fasting only works if it causes you to have a weekly calorie deficit, fasting itself doesn’t really cause fat loss

  • tomcustombuilder
    tomcustombuilder Posts: 2,307 Member
    edited February 9
    How long have you been doing this?
    You may not be eating enough calories.
    I know that sounds counter-intuitive. But a small deficit over the long term will often yield better long term results.
    if there’s no loss in four weeks, it’s not a matter of eating too few calories. It’s a matter of eating too many calories.