To lose 50 lbs in 5 months

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Replies

  • AdAstra47
    AdAstra47 Posts: 823 Member
    Your timeline should be "as long as it takes to get fit in a healthy and non-damaging way."

    This. Yes.

    Healthy, sustainable weight loss (where you're still getting all the nutrients your body needs, and you're only losing fat instead of muscle) will only be around 1-2 lb per week. So even if you lose 2 lb a week, to lose 50 lb would take you until mid-July, that's more like 6 months. Everyone's body is different, of course, but your goal should be to get there in a healthy way, otherwise you'll be miserable, damage your health, and just turn around & gain it all back.

    There's nothing wrong with setting a goal, as well as mini-goals, to help make sure you stay on track. I have 130 lb to lose, and I'm almost to 60, 70 to go. It has been very helpful for me to set a series of goals & document / celebrate when I reach each one. But they should be realistic goals, and I'm not sure 10 lb a month is realistic. I'm averaging more like 6 lb a month, but my doctor assures me that it's all fat & water weight, I'm not losing muscle, and my hair & nails & skin are healthier than they've ever been, so I know I'm losing in a good way. Listen to your body's signals, and do what's right for your body.

    Good luck to you!
  • sherrybaby81
    sherrybaby81 Posts: 257 Member
    I did Weight Watchers before and I usually lost about 10-12 lbs a month. I was satisfied, eating properly, exercising and using all my Weight Watchers points. The only reason I put weight back on is because I got lazy and ate, and ate and ate! The weight stayed off for a good 2 years before I got lazy.

    I have lost 11 lbs since Jan 2nd 2012, and I am hoping to lose a total of 15 by the end of the month. After than I am aiming to lose 10 lbs a month as well, until I have lost a total of 65 lbs. I feel it is possible and healthy if you are eating properly. Not everyone's bodies are the same, and we all lose weight differently.

    Good luck!
  • I'm sure the majority of people on this site who are here to lose weight wish it could happen RIGHT NOW.
    But to come to a place like this and say "I might even try something a bit crazy if that is what it takes. :-) " is probably not going to get you the answers you are looking for.

    I wish I could be more supportive, but I'm afraid your RIGHTNOW attitude will set you up for failure. Use MFP as it's designed, stay strong and it will happen. It may not happen on your timeline, but you'll get there.

    This!!
  • FairuzyAmanuzy
    FairuzyAmanuzy Posts: 221 Member
    I eat 1200, and follow the primal diet and I easily lose 10+ pounds a month with minimal exercise and never feeling hungry. Not saying it will work for everyone but this works for me.....If you are vegan, this diet will be hard to follow.
  • tunktunk5583
    tunktunk5583 Posts: 76 Member
    I do not think this is a healthy or realistic plan.
  • bmacholiday
    bmacholiday Posts: 210 Member
    Bump to read later.
  • I should add that I eat between 1400-1800 calories a day. Depending on how much I work out and what my body feels like it needs. I do not go hungry, I usually eat 4-6 times a day and I always try to keep my snacks really healthy (although this week not so much...) . Everyone is going to be different. Some things work great for some people and not others. I've done a 500 calorie, phendemetrizine, low carb hi protein diet and I thought it was amazing.... I lost 30lbs, and man I thought I looked awesome. Well I just did a photo comparison and I am smaller now than I was 6 months ago, and I am 30lbs heavier but much more fit than I have ever been! After my 3 months on the fad diet (doctor supervised I might add) my hair was brittle, finger nails brittle, and my hair was falling out like crazy! Thats when I decided it was time for me to lose weight the healthy way. I've worked with a nutritionist minimally just to make sure I am getting everything I need and also a trainer when I first started (I only see her 1 time a month because I live in a different state). I try to do different exercise classes, change my workouts, and learn everything I can about eating properly long term. Eating enough is so important!!!

    Yes I totally want to lose 50lbs by May but as long as my body is becoming stronger and more fit I am completely okay with not meeting that particular goal on time. But by May I will at least LOOK like I have lost 50 :)
  • rac401
    rac401 Posts: 8
    To the OP your current regime is highly dangerous to your health, I sincerely hope no one else takes a leaf out your book. Other than the obvious danger of trying to lose so much weight so fast, you will inevitably put it all back on if you stop exercising and return to normal eating patterns because your body will over compensate for the starvation you are putting yourself through!
  • PinkEarthMama
    PinkEarthMama Posts: 987 Member
    I'd love to lose 10 pounds a month. I'd also like to stay healthy, which is why my goal is only 6-8 pounds a month.

    This is not " the biggest loser ". This is LIFE, and you only get one. Exercising like a mad person, and eating only 1200 calories may land you dizzy, driving on the freeway.

    Aim for making the absolute healthiest choices you possibly can. Lots of fruit, tons of veggies. No white sugar, no flour. Drink crazy amounts of water ( I personally drink 3 liters a day. Half the time when i think " i'm hungry "... I'm only thirsy ). Eat a LOT of fiber.

    You MAY find that you have huge losses the first week -a friend of mine lost 10 pounds the first week of healthy eating - she lost all the excess water weight, the fiber gave her a good old fashion clean out... and after that she lost 2 pounds a week.
  • Greg127
    Greg127 Posts: 100 Member
    Your plan goes against the philosophy of MFP and like most of the posters here I agree on a long term healthier approach.

    That said, sure, starve yourself down to your desired weight, get the headaches, gastric distress, heart palipations, the bad breath from ketosis and possibly die on the gym floor from heart failure because you've lost so much heart muscle. That's your decision.

    Percentage is you'll probably live through the entire weight loss, when you stop the diet, it will coming flooding back, pound after pound. Once you reach that goal or have your event/special occasion, the minute you start eating regularly, your body will hoard every unused calorie as fat. Hopefully you'll be back here, ready to accept a slower lifestyle weightloss.

    If you can live with that then I say go for it. It's your life and your weight loss. Good Luck. :smile:
  • juls262
    juls262 Posts: 41
    You're weight loss is a journey, you have to give your body time. If you continue like this, you're only setting yourself up to fail. With the calorie deficit you're creating, your body will probably go into starvation mode and retain any and all weight it can.
    Not to mention-what are you planning on doing after the 5 months? Are you going to be on this type of diet for the rest of your life? You lose in an unhealthy way and then go back to a regular diet, you'll gain everything back. You have to keep in mind that you're not just losing weight, you're changing to a healthy lifestyle. Repeat- lifestyle! Make it a lifestyle you can actually live with!

    That being said, your body is your body, everyone's will be different. But make sure you're listening to it.
  • catcrazy
    catcrazy Posts: 1,740 Member
    MyFitnessPal strongly recommends that users follow the calorie guidelines automatically assigned by the site, unless they are under the direct supervision of a doctor.

    As has been pointed out by numerous posters, what you are attempting is likely to be counter productive in the long term and I would strongly urge you to reconsider your goals.

    CatCrazy
    MyFitnessPal Forum Moderator
  • andrejjorje
    andrejjorje Posts: 497 Member
    WOW. Nice to meet you. The 1st MFP moderator I see any of the posts I've read up to know. Rara avis.:smile:
    MyFitnessPal strongly recommends that users follow the calorie guidelines automatically assigned by the site, unless they are under the direct supervision of a doctor.

    As has been pointed out by numerous posters, what you are attempting is likely to be counter productive in the long term and I would strongly urge you to reconsider your goals.

    CatCrazy
    MyFitnessPal Forum Moderator
  • DrNicoleRed
    DrNicoleRed Posts: 52 Member
    Give us some stats.
    Age
    Height
    Actual weight. Starting weight.
    What workouts/cadio for how long.
    Open up your diary.

    Do not expect to get realistic answers if you don't ask realistic questions.
    So let's see what you've got.

    Agree with OPENING UP YOUR DIARY for feedback on small changes on your diet (or congrats when you've made good choices), and that it is hard for anyone to make reasonable recs without the data the person I've quoted suggests. Because you want aggressive weight loss, I think you should revisit involving a weight loss MD for guidance! As I've shared with you, the MFP estimations for my BMR were about 200 calories above my measured (by indirect calorimetry) BMR. So yes, perhaps the MFP estimations may be inaccurate for you, but I would not advise making adjustments without a formal measurement so you are working with real numbers rather than guessing. Furthermore, since you are newly vegan, I think you need the guidance of a nutritionist to be sure you are meeting your nutritional needs in the setting of caloric nutrition.

    You NEVER want your calorie deficit to be too far below your BMR. I agree with many posters that for the amount you are exercising that 1200 on those days may not be adequate your metabolism will slow to compensate...you'll still lose weight but MUCH slower which is exactly opposite of what you are trying to achieve.

    Love, your MFP and real friend ;)
  • Peachoid
    Peachoid Posts: 10 Member
    Wow, I got more replies than expected. I am doing this under the supervision of a clinical dietician and I am with 'crazy' I do not mean drastic, desperate or rash.
    I agree that it is easier to lose faster if the weight is higher and then the wt loss slows down.
    I have a wide range of opinions here. Whatever I do is a lifestyle not a fad diet or burst of over reaching ambition.
    I have given my body the time to adjust and have not lost anything in a hurry.
    I am concerned about the damage caused by exhaustion and low cal intake. I hope to never do that to myself, hence I am here and talking to people pursuing healthy weight loss, quite like myself.
    Guess I will give it more time, but what is a loss without a goal.

    Thanks again.
  • catcrazy
    catcrazy Posts: 1,740 Member
    WOW. Nice to meet you. The 1st MFP moderator I see any of the posts I've read up to know. Rara avis.:smile:

    Nice to meet you too.

    We post, if its not in an official capacity we don't advertise and sign...kind of makes us thread killers! In this instance there were a few reports expressing concern so I was wearing my mod hat!

    @abhikale - glad youre seeking some professional advice
  • Wow, I got more replies than expected. I am doing this under the supervision of a clinical dietician and I am with 'crazy' I do not mean drastic, desperate or rash.
    I agree that it is easier to lose faster if the weight is higher and then the wt loss slows down.
    I have a wide range of opinions here. Whatever I do is a lifestyle not a fad diet or burst of over reaching ambition.
    I have given my body the time to adjust and have not lost anything in a hurry.
    I am concerned about the damage caused by exhaustion and low cal intake. I hope to never do that to myself...
    Thanks again.

    The thing to remember is that a lifestyle is for LIFE. It's for the days you're super sick and need to cut the workout. It's for years and years from now. It's a 'for good' sort of level. Do you want to be flat-out running for two or three hours a day, every day for the rest of your life? What if you get honestly busy? What if someone at work brings in the most delicious cookies ever?

    It is very clear that you are really focused and dedicated, that's amazingly good - but weight loss is not about forcing your body it's about working with it. You will lose weight more effectively by eating enough calories to fuel your body. If you've done the super low thing for a whole, eating enough to fuel you may look like a 'backslide' for a little - but it will come back off, and better now than later.

    Take away your 1060 for exercise and you are giving yourself the same number of calories for everything else your body needs through the day as you would have received in a concentration camp like Auschwitz. It is not enough. Honestly? If that is what your nutritionist/dietician told you to eat, if I were you I would fire them, and report them to whatever licensing agency they are certified through. That is FAR from healthy!!
  • ansinclair8
    ansinclair8 Posts: 24 Member
    As of January 24 I will have been living a new lifestyle for five months. I am down 47lbs as of last Monday, so by my five month mark I expect to be at 49lbs. Depending on how much you have to lose, it is possible to safely lose 50lbs in 5 months. However, you say that you are willing to do anything. You need to have the right mindset. I realized that I'm worth so much more than I gave myself credit for and I deserved to be healthy and happy with my body. I eat 1200 calories a day except for one day a week where I go over and have one meal where I eat the food I'm craving. I exercise 3-4 times a week. I have found journaling my food and exercise on MFP has been a wonderful tool as well as all the friends who are here to motivate you. I know that how I'm losing this weight is healthy. I can live the rest of my life eating and exercising this way. It's not a fad diet. If you do whatever it takes to lose the 50lbs in that time and you do it in an unhealthy way, you are just going to gain it back. Please, please do it the healthy way. If you don't lose the weight as fast, don't obsess over it. You can do this!
  • As of January 24 I will have been living a new lifestyle for five months. I am down 47lbs as of last Monday, so by my five month mark I expect to be at 49lbs. Depending on how much you have to lose, it is possible to safely lose 50lbs in 5 months. However, you say that you are willing to do anything. You need to have the right mindset. I realized that I'm worth so much more than I gave myself credit for and I deserved to be healthy and happy with my body. I eat 1200 calories a day except for one day a week where I go over and have one meal where I eat the food I'm craving. I exercise 3-4 times a week. I have found journaling my food and exercise on MFP has been a wonderful tool as well as all the friends who are here to motivate you. I know that how I'm losing this weight is healthy. I can live the rest of my life eating and exercising this way. It's not a fad diet. If you do whatever it takes to lose the 50lbs in that time and you do it in an unhealthy way, you are just going to gain it back. Please, please do it the healthy way. If you don't lose the weight as fast, don't obsess over it. You can do this!

    THIS is inspiring! :)
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