Extremely frustrated // need to vent
BakedBlonde
Posts: 16 Member
I started eating healthy back in January to lose 30 lbs by June. MFP had me set at 1200 calories per day at that time. I had a sedentary lifestyle and did not work out. So I ate 1200, I lost 3 lbs. BUT THATS IT! Fast-forward to now, almost 3 months later. I am still at 176 (SW was 180). I don't know how to fix this!
Middle of February I realized I stopped losing weight so I upped my calories to 1450, still I have lost nothing.
I upped my calories again at the start of March to 1500, and started working out. I've been doing cardio for the last couple of weeks, 4x / week for 30 minutes each time. I still see no improvement. (Also to add, I do not eat back exercise cals)
Its so frustrating, to count my calories so carefully and see NOTHING.
Middle of February I realized I stopped losing weight so I upped my calories to 1450, still I have lost nothing.
I upped my calories again at the start of March to 1500, and started working out. I've been doing cardio for the last couple of weeks, 4x / week for 30 minutes each time. I still see no improvement. (Also to add, I do not eat back exercise cals)
Its so frustrating, to count my calories so carefully and see NOTHING.
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Replies
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That must be fustrating!!
Are you watching your sodium intake as that will retain water / weight if you have too much.
Eating back some or all of your exercise calories could help with your weightloss. Else you will have an even larger calorie deficit than before.0 -
Every time I workout I gain water weight, so you might be losing and not realize it.0
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I agree that must be frustrating. How well are you eating? Maybe if you opened your diary so we could see the quality of the foods you are consuming.0
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Maybe I am misunderstanding, but are you saying that you noticed you were no longer losing weight, so you upped your daily caloric intake from 1200 to 1450 and then to 1500?
Im not a professional but increasing your daily caloric intake does not help you lose weight. Kudos to you for starting to work out in march, that should help, but maybe you should pay more attention to measurements and BMI instead of concentrating solely on weight. It might show the improvements that you have yet to realize.0 -
I would try eating back some of your calories. It should help. Also you might want to measure & or weigh your food intake just to make sure you are counting it right I know when I did WW people were amazed when shown what 6oz of something looks like vs what they thought it was0
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in addition to the other posts...whats your bmr? try setting that as your calorie goal and eat back your exercise calories.0
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try taking measurements, you may be toning and loosing inches rather than weight?0
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I know that can be frustrating i am a slow loser also. but i have found that taking my measurements lets me know that i am losing even when the scale says im not.0
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Maybe I am misunderstanding, but are you saying that you noticed you were no longer losing weight, so you upped your daily caloric intake from 1200 to 1450 and then to 1500?
Im not a professional but increasing your daily caloric intake does not help you lose weight. Kudos to you for starting to work out in march, that should help, but maybe you should pay more attention to measurements and BMI instead of concentrating solely on weight.0 -
I would try eating back some of your calories. It should help. Also you might want to measure & or weigh your food intake just to make sure you are counting it right I know when I did WW people were amazed when shown what 6oz of something looks like vs what they thought it was
I'm going to take measurements. I never thought I might be losing inches and not weight!0 -
I started January with hope to lose by June as well. My weight is slowing coming off...never fast enough.
I would suggest stressing less and doing a few different things.
Exercise - walk, weights, stretches...mix it up but try to do something everyday.
Aim to eat 1200 calories plus more if you exercise more...some days I eat 1500 calories, some days 1300 others 1200..again I mix it up.
Good luck -- I feel your frustration!!!0 -
Without seeing your food intake it is really hard to say what it is. What kind of exercise are you doing?0
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Maybe I am misunderstanding, but are you saying that you noticed you were no longer losing weight, so you upped your daily caloric intake from 1200 to 1450 and then to 1500?
Im not a professional but increasing your daily caloric intake does not help you lose weight. Kudos to you for starting to work out in march, that should help, but maybe you should pay more attention to measurements and BMI instead of concentrating solely on weight.
My thoughts exactly. I'd rather not starve myself because I know I won't be able to keep up with that and its unhealthy.0 -
Without seeing your food intake it is really hard to say what it is. What kind of exercise are you doing?
Since March 1st, I've been doing cardio 4x per week at 30 minutes each time.0 -
You need to understand that your body is very clever. You cut it's food intake, and after an initial period of weight loss, it readjusted to this new lower level. Exercise tends to increase metabolic rates so combining exercise and calorie reduction together means that your body doesn't reset it's need for food to the lower level. At least that is the very non technical theory. So, you need to take a deep breath. Be calm, and start to exercise whilst cutting calorie intake.
And then keep that going at a moderate level.0 -
Maybe I am misunderstanding, but are you saying that you noticed you were no longer losing weight, so you upped your daily caloric intake from 1200 to 1450 and then to 1500?
Im not a professional but increasing your daily caloric intake does not help you lose weight. Kudos to you for starting to work out in march, that should help, but maybe you should pay more attention to measurements and BMI instead of concentrating solely on weight.
My thoughts exactly. I'd rather not starve myself because I know I won't be able to keep up with that and its unhealthy.0 -
There is a group on here Called Eat More Weigh less. Check it out.0
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I haven't been stuck for as long as you but my scale has been in same place for a month or so.
My pants are changing cause they are growing.
Couple more sizes and the belt will need a new hole in it as well.
Hope you figure out what works for you.
Maybe like suggested try different foods.0 -
Are you weighing everything you eat, particularly calorie dense food?0
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Are you drinking the 8 cups of water,a day????? You would be surprised how much the water intake helps,when it comes to weight loss.0
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Without seeing your food intake it is really hard to say what it is. What kind of exercise are you doing?
Since March 1st, I've been doing cardio 4x per week at 30 minutes each time.
Consider adding weight training. Also, take pictures of yourself from month to month to see a visual on the progress. I have a really hard time seeing progress on myself, despite the fact that some of my clothes fit better, my watch is looser, etc. Body dysmorphia can really get in the way of visualizing your progress.0 -
Hi i can understand why you are frustrated.
When i first started logging here a month ago I started at the 1200 calories that MFP set for me, and stuck with my normal routine.
After a week i started understanding what 1200 calories looked like, 1200 calories is hard to stick to somedays and i quickly realised that i could eat more if i worked out. By week 2 i had lost 2lbs so i knew that the calorie counting was working.
So i started exercising a little more so i could eat more food, i took everyones advise and ate back my calories, week 3 my weight didn't move. Because i don't have an Heart rate monitor i couldn't accurately measure my calories burned so i stopped eating back all my calories burned. I eat back probably 50% of what i burn through exercise.
4 weeks later i have lost 8lbs, by still sticking to 1200 calories +50% of what i burn. If i stall again i will probably start eating back 75% calories burned.
My suggestion to you is wipe the slate clean, go back to the beginning:
Start at 1200 calories a day, learn what 1200 calories looks like, let your body adjust to eating less.
then start exercising a little see how you feel eating back the calories you burn.
Stick with the 1200 calories if you go over one day don't eat less the next day, just move a little more.
If by the 4th week you are feeling tired, not losing weight, not losing inches then look at upping the calories by 250 a day.
I know that it is frustrating when the weight doesn't melt away, but i think of it as the slower to go the longer before it comes back.
I hope this helps and i hope you keep trying.
I honestly think a fresh start will be good for you.0 -
Maybe I am misunderstanding, but are you saying that you noticed you were no longer losing weight, so you upped your daily caloric intake from 1200 to 1450 and then to 1500?
Im not a professional but increasing your daily caloric intake does not help you lose weight. Kudos to you for starting to work out in march, that should help, but maybe you should pay more attention to measurements and BMI instead of concentrating solely on weight. It might show the improvements that you have yet to realize.
Yes it does. When you're creating too large of a deficit, your metabolism braces itself for trouble and slows right down. You need to change up your diet/exercise both after while, because your body will adapt and you will no longer get results. (And this is info from a professional, for the record.)
The human body is a really smart machine. You have to keep it guessing.
To the original poster: you're more active now, so increasing calories is a good move. Find out what your BMR is so you can have a better idea of what your deficit needs to be. Personally, I was RADICALLY undereating and working out a lot, so my body basically said, "Hold the phone. WTF are you doing, girl?"
Remember, though, that not all calories are made equal. So, when you up your calories or have exercise calories to eat, continue making clean choices. (And allowing for the occasional treat.)
And the scale = whatevs. I lift weights, so I weigh the same but have lost inched and body fat %. Find a measurement that works for you.0 -
Bummer!! My only suggestion would be to do some strength training. You may not burn that many calories while lifting, but the muscle you build will continue to burn calories all day long. However, with this you have to keep in mind you might not lose weight in terms of numbers since muscle weights more than fat, but you should lose inches and fat.0
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I recently bought a BodyMedia Fit Core, to see what I really was burning throughout the day. I had been eating 1200-1500 depending on exercise since I started on here(July 2011) and did see great results up until December. Turns out that I am burning on average 2300 calories on REST days. As I got closer to my goal weight, I am *possibly* within 10lbs of it, my body just wasn't going to tolerate such a big deficit anymore, no wonder I wasn't losing any more weight. So yes, upping calories is the answer for some people. The "eat less+workout more=faster weight loss" is a totally dangerous LIE.
Calculate you BMR, eat that, add in exercise calories, take your measurements and ditch the scale for a month or two.0 -
I recently bought a BodyMedia Fit Core, to see what I really was burning throughout the day. I had been eating 1200-1500 depending on exercise since I started on here(July 2011) and did see great results up until December. Turns out that I am burning on average 2300 calories on REST days. As I got closer to my goal weight, I am *possibly* within 10lbs of it, my body just wasn't going to tolerate such a big deficit anymore, no wonder I wasn't losing any more weight. So yes, upping calories is the answer for some people. The "eat less+workout more=faster weight loss" is a totally dangerous LIE.
Calculate you BMR, eat that, add in exercise calories, take your measurements and ditch the scale for a month or two.
This right here.0 -
Eat back your exercise calories. Can't stress it enough.0
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I would really lean towards looking at what foods you are eating as the culprit.
What is your average sugar intake a day? Sugar spikes your insulin and causes your body to yoyo. One minute your body thinks its got plenty of food and the next all the sugar and simple carbs have been processed and your body thinks you are starving, causing it to store more food. Keeping insulin levels rolling rather then spiking can help you feel fuller and boost metabolism.
Eating the right kind of foods can make all the difference. :-)0 -
I recently bought a BodyMedia Fit Core, to see what I really was burning throughout the day. I had been eating 1200-1500 depending on exercise since I started on here(July 2011) and did see great results up until December. Turns out that I am burning on average 2300 calories on REST days. As I got closer to my goal weight, I am *possibly* within 10lbs of it, my body just wasn't going to tolerate such a big deficit anymore, no wonder I wasn't losing any more weight. So yes, upping calories is the answer for some people. The "eat less+workout more=faster weight loss" is a totally dangerous LIE.
Calculate you BMR, eat that, add in exercise calories, take your measurements and ditch the scale for a month or two.
Ok so I eat exactly what my BMR is?
BMR is 1658.
So do I eat that exactly? OR do I subtract 500 calories from that so I can lose 1 lb a week?
(pardon my ignorance)0 -
Maybe I am misunderstanding, but are you saying that you noticed you were no longer losing weight, so you upped your daily caloric intake from 1200 to 1450 and then to 1500?
Im not a professional but increasing your daily caloric intake does not help you lose weight. Kudos to you for starting to work out in march, that should help, but maybe you should pay more attention to measurements and BMI instead of concentrating solely on weight. It might show the improvements that you have yet to realize.
Increasing your calorie intake helps for a lot of people. To find the amount of calories you need to maintain your current weight, you take your weight times 14. For me, its 204 times 14 = 2856. That is how much I need to eat per day without burning any off to maintain my weight of 204. So to cut 2lbs per week, I would subtract 1000 calories. That means I need to net about 1800 per day to lose weight.
MFP told me to eat 1240 originally, which is not nearly enough for me. Meaning, calories were scarce and so my body was hoarding. It 1240 worked for the first couple of weeks, but then I stayed put for weeks. Until I started eating more. Then the scale started moving down again.
Maybe it doesn't work for everyone, but staying between 1400 and 1700 for me has me continuing to lose weight, were at 1240, I stalled.
So to the original poster, try that formula above: your weight times 14, minus 1000 if you want to lose 2lbs per week, -500 for one. Then eat that many calories and eat back the exercise calories too. Good luck!0
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